The team of five researchers conducted individual and collaborative research. Ivan Sablin explored the history of parliamentary institutions in Russia and the Soviet Union, with special attention to diversity management and the role of global developments. Working in Germany, Russia, and Hungary, he collected documents on the State Duma of the Russian Empire, revolutionary parliaments, the Soviet representative bodies, the assemblies of the Communist Party, the Supreme Soviet, and several hundred works on parliamentarism, written by intellectuals and politicians. He (co-)wrote several articles and chapters and a monograph. Jargal Badagarov conducted archival research in Russia and Mongolia. He looked at how the terms “democracy,” “parliament,” and “constitution” contributed to the making of the Modern Mongolic languages. Irina Sodnomova worked in Russian archives and libraries, including those of the Republic of Kalmykia. She contributed to the group’s research on the translatability of the concept of “parliament” and the history of khurals in Russia and Mongolia. Martin Dorn went to Ukraine for his fieldwork and collected materials on the revolutionary transformations in Ukrainian territories after the Habsburg and Russian empires. In particular, he was interested in how Jews and Poles participated in the Ukrainian representative institutions. He also contributed to the group’s study of concepts, exploring that of rada. Kyonghee Lee studied the remotely available and previously accessed sources on the circulation of concepts pertaining to self-government in East Asia. She defended her PhD thesis on the initially Chinese concept of "community compact" (a form of rural self-administration) in Korea. The members of the project engaged in cooperation outside the group through four workshops, one conference, and four collaborative publications. The project also hosted five visiting scholars, Prof. Dr. Christopher Atwood, Maria Ukhvatova, Dr. Aimar Ventsel, Amgalan Zhamsoev, and Dr. Olha Holovina. Overall, the project resulted in the publication of two edited volumes: Sablin, Ivan, and Moniz Bandeira, Egas (eds.). Parties as Governments in Eurasia, 1913–1991: Nationalism, Socialism, and Development. London: Routledge, 2022; Sablin, Ivan, and Moniz Bandeira, Egas (eds.). Planting Parliaments in Eurasia, 1850–1950: Concepts, Practices, and Mythologies. London: Routledge, 2021; two journal special issues: Parliaments, Estates and Representation, vol. 42, no. 1, 2022 (Special Issue: Parliaments, Elections and Constitutions in Qing and Russian Imperial Transformations, 1860s–1920s, ed. by Ivan Sablin and Egas Moniz Bandeira); Journal of Eurasian Studies, vol. 11, no. 1, 2020 (Special Issue: Parliamentary Formations and Diversities in (Post-)Imperial Eurasia, ed. by Ivan Sablin); seven peer-reviewed articles; and eight chapters in the project’s and other edited volumes.