Osip Yermansky

Osip Arkadyevich Yermansky (Russian: О́сип Арка́дьевич Ерма́нский, born Yosif Arkadyevich Kogan, Иосиф Аркадьевич Коган; known by the pseudonyms M. Borisov, A. O. Gushka, Meerovich, and P. R.) (July 28, 1867 in Akkerman, Bessarabia Governorate 1941) was a Russian Social Democratic political figure, economic theorist, pamphleteer, and memoirist. He was one of the originators of the Soviet school of management, in particular its psychophysiological tendency. He regarded scientific management as a syncretic, interdisciplinary system, drawing material from other scientific disciplines, such as technology, economics, psychology, and physiology.

Biography

Yermansky was born in Akkerman, a town on the Dniester estuary, into a family of artisans. After receiving a traditional Jewish education, he studied jurisprudence at Odessa University. In 1888, as a consequence of his involvement in the students' movement, he was expelled and sent to the Caucasus. In 1891 he went to Switzerland, where he became acquainted with Pavel Axelrod, Vera Zasulich, Georgi Plekhanov, and Rosa Luxemburg. In 1892 he joined the Social Democratic movement while a student in Zurich, and in 1895 returned to Russia.

He became one of the leaders of the Social Democratic Party in southern Russia and editor of the newspaper Southern Worker («Южный рабочий»). After the 2nd Congress of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party, he became a Menshevik. He was a delegate to the 4th Congress. In 1907 he turned his focus to literary activity, and became the editor of several newspapers. During the First World War, as one of the leaders of the St. Petersburg "Initiative-taking group" (which espoused an internationalist anti-war position), Yermansky authored anti-war leaflets and contributed to the Menshevik press.

After the February Revolution of 1917, he was from March to May the editor in chief of the Working Gazette («Рабочая газета»), the official paper of the Menshevik organization. In June he was a delegate to the first Congress of Soviets, and to the first All-Russian Central Executive Committee. From September to December he was the editor of Iskra.

After the October Revolution of 1917 he spoke in favor of the creation of uniform socialist government. At the Extraordinary 7th Congress of the RCP(b), he was elected to the presidium of congress. In contrast to Julius Martov, he proposed that the Mensheviks enter the All-Russian Central Executive Committee in order to provide a counterweight to the Bolsheviks.

In the spring of 1918 he moved to Moscow, where he edited the Menshevik journal Working International. In 1919 he became a full member of the Socialist Academy, and in 1920 he was elected to the Mossovet. He was arrested on August 23, 1920, and released in September. In April 1921 he left the RSDLP and joined the faculty of Moscow State University, where he concentrated exclusively on management and the scientific organization of labor. He was once more arrested on July 30, 1921, and again in 1931. From 1933 to 1936 he managed the department of economics and management at Bauman Moscow State Technical University. He was arrested in 1937 and again, for the last time, in 1940. He died in a Gulag in 1941.[1]

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