Collectivization
- Collectivization- All peasants were to work on collective farms
- Called Kolkhoz, all land was pooled together
- Party officials monitored their output
- By 1932 62% of all peasents collectivized
- Kulaks were wealthier peasents who owned their own farms
- They were killed or sent to Gulags in Siberia
- Seen as a threat to collectivization
Summary: Stalin wanted to overcome the food crisis by holding the country and increasing slave labour. It was where all the land, tools, buildings, and livestock were owned by the government. However, there was not enough money made for the "peasants" and some did not want to give up their land. If that was the cause they had three choices, on