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collective farm
(redirected from Collective farming)

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collective farm

Farm in which a group of farmers pool their land, domestic animals, and agricultural implements, retaining as private property enough only for the members' own requirements. The profits of the farm are divided among its members. In cooperative farming, farmers retain private ownership of the land.

Collective farming was first developed in the USSR in 1917, where it became general after 1930. Stalin's collectivization drive 1929–33 wrecked a flourishing agricultural system and alienated the Soviet peasants from the land: 15 million people were left homeless, 1 million of whom were sent to labour camps and some 12 million deported to Siberia. In subsequent years, millions of those peasants forced into collectives died. Collective farming is practised in other countries; it was adopted from 1953 in China, and Israel has a large number of collective farms (see kibbutz).



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
Prior to the Israeli occupation, because of Syrian policy encouraging collective farming, people saw little need to register their land.
Some of the topics discussed in this volume, like collective farming (before the reform) and the two-track price system (in the 1980s), seem very remote to readers of Chinese affairs today.
My father was an agronomist, and he was seen as an enemy of the people because he opposed the forced implementation of collective farming.
 
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