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The Future of the Soviet Collective Farm
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 January 2017
Extract
In 1955 the present writer examined the struggle being waged against the peasantry by the Communist Party in the USSR and came to the conclusion that the liquidation of the Soviet peasantry as a class is inescapable.
Since then, significant new legislation has been passed in the field of agriculture in the USSR.
All these new measures have the same tendency of bringing the peasant class in the USSR a few steps nearer to eradication and the kolkhozes nearer to the status of sovkhozes.
Two Kinds of Socialist Property: The Soviet Constitution (Section 5) recognizes two kinds of property: state property and cooperative property. Both are qualified as “socialist.”
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- Copyright © Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies 1960
References
1 Kucherov, Samuel, “The Communist Party vs. the Peasantry in the Soviet Union,” Political Science Quarterly, No. 2 (June, 1955), pp. 181–96 Google Scholar.
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9 It is interesting to note what Pasternak's, B. hero, Dr. Zhivago, , says about collectivization: “To conceal the failure [of collectivization], people had to be cured by every producmeans of terrorism of the habit of thinking and judging for themselves and forced to see what didn't exist, to assert the very opposite of what their eyes told them.” (New York Times, October 24, 1958, p. 6).Google Scholar
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14 Boarding schools will have to play a great role not only in rural, but also in urban areas as well. Introduced only three years ago, the boarding schools already have 180,000 pupils. In June, 1958, the Soviet government decreed that by 1965 the enrollment of boarding schools should be brought to 2,500,000 students. See Khrushchev's, “theses,” Izvestia, November 14, 1958, pp. 1–9 Google Scholar.
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46 Fixed wages have been introduced in 3,340 collective farms or in 5.6 per cent of all kolkhozes as of July 1, 1959, (Radio Moscow, June 20, 1959)Google Scholar.
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