Results 211 to 220 of about 1,155 (264)
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The Peasant Commune and the Stolypin Reforms: Peasant Attitudes, 1906–14

1990
It has usually been argued that the Stolypin Reforms represented the old regime’s, and specifically the landed nobility’s, final attempt to save itself from revolutionary destruction.1 As such, the Reforms have been seen primarily as defending the sacred and holy right of private (that is, noble) property by extending that right to the peasantry.
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Russian reforms: the return of the peasant? [PDF]

open access: possible, 1999
Russian agriculture in transition (1991-1998) was characterised by a production collapse due to aloss in quality and quantity of acreage, disinvestments, falling purchasingpower, and increasedimports. Neither traditional agriculture nor the nascent family farm sector havebeen able to ensure sustained food production.
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PEASANT PASSIVITY AND VIOLENCE PROBLEMS OF PEASANT ORGANIZATION DURING LAND REFORM IN COMMUNIST CHINA*

Sociologia Ruralis, 1981
SummaryPeasants have frequently been observed to exhibit two patterns of political behavior which tend to inhibit the formation and consolidation of peasant economic and political organizations, namely political passivity and violence. Theories so far have usually concentrated on explaining either only one of these behavior patterns, or only one class ...
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Peasant Agriculture and Land Reform in Eastern Europe

1968
Toward the end of the war and in the years immediately following, peasant unrest became significant throughout eastern Europe, manifesting itself in the withholding of produce from the market as well as in political disorders. In economic terms, the problems of peasant agriculture arose from the fact that it was undercapitalized, labor intensive and ...
Shepard B. Clough   +2 more
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Kiselev'S Reforms Of State Peasants: The Baltic Perspective

Journal of Baltic Studies, 2008
This article attempts to estimate how far-reaching and successful the Kiselev reforms of state peasants in the Baltic Provinces of Russia were. It also challenges the view deeply entrenched in Baltic scholarly literature that it was the local provincial Diets and not the imperial authorities that initiated many of the so-called peasant emancipation ...
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The politics of peasant burden in reform china

Journal of Peasant Studies, 1997
This article analyses the changing nature and role of the state in rural China during reform by examining the issue of peasant financial burdens. It argues that, despite some successes in transforming China's countryside, the state has not been reduced since the reform began in 1978.
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The Russian Peasant Commune After the Reforms of the 1860s

Slavic Review, 1985
In the 1860s the Russian government carried out a series of major reforms that had important consequences for key dimensions of Russian society—its economy, judiciary, local administration, army, censorship, and education. Historians have generally agreed that these reforms exerted a profound influence upon Russian historical development, but they have
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Agrarian reforms in Kerala — the role of peasant organisations

Journal of Contemporary Asia, 1984
(1984). Agrarian reforms in Kerala — the role of peasant organisations. Journal of Contemporary Asia: Vol. 14, No. 1, pp. 48-61.
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Integrative oncology: Addressing the global challenges of cancer prevention and treatment

Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2022
Jun J Mao,, Msce   +2 more
exaly  

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