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collectivization
[kuh-lek-tuh-vahy-zey-shuhn]
noun
the act or process of organizing a people, industry, enterprise, etc., according to collectivism, an economic system in which control, especially of the means of production, is shared cooperatively or centralized.
After World War I Russia introduced a full-scale command economy, including the collectivization of agriculture and the nationalization of almost all industrial capital.
the act of making something apply to a group of people as a whole rather than as individuals.
The collectivization of guilt is a tool used to show that the community in which the crimes occurred has yet to become a community that can guarantee they will not be repeated.
Word History and Origins
Example Sentences
In the 1930s, his successor, Joseph Stalin, cited the “inefficiency” of individual farming as justification for the collectivization of millions of peasants into state farms, creating a “terror-famine” in Ukraine.
Ukrainian villages have bounced back before, from war, famine and collectivization.
The first Five-Year Plan seized this land for the state under a program called “collectivization.”
There, she discovered that Mao’s earlier experiment with collectivization had been a disaster.
Forced collectivization of agriculture under Joseph Stalin, Lenin’s successor as the Soviet leader, drove a wave of famine in the early 1930s.
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