
Published online:
31 January 2012
Published in print:
23 February 2006
Online ISBN:
9780191734786
Print ISBN:
9780197263471
Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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Failed Land Reform in Russia, 1861–2000 Failed Land Reform in Russia, 1861–2000
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Rural Preference for Collective Farming in Transition Rural Preference for Collective Farming in Transition
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Preferences for Communal Landholding in the Nineteenth Century Preferences for Communal Landholding in the Nineteenth Century
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Resistance: 1860–2000 Resistance: 1860–2000
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Modelling Resistance to Reform with Adaptive Learning Modelling Resistance to Reform with Adaptive Learning
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The Fernandez-Rodrik Model The Fernandez-Rodrik Model
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The Russian Case The Russian Case
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Conclusion: The Russian Rural Community and Market-Based Land Reform Conclusion: The Russian Rural Community and Market-Based Land Reform
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References References
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Chapter
8. Rational Resistance to Land Privatization: The Behaviour of Russia’s Rural Producers in Response to Agrarian Reforms, 1861–2000
Get access
Pages
267–295
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Published:February 2006
Cite
Leonard, Carol Scott, 'Rational Resistance to Land Privatization: The Behaviour of Russia’s Rural Producers in Response to Agrarian Reforms, 1861–2000', in Paul A. David, and Mark Thomas (eds), The Economic Future in Historical Perspective, British Academy Centenary Monographs (London , 2006; online edn, British Academy Scholarship Online, 31 Jan. 2012), https://doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197263471.003.0009, accessed 9 May 2025.
Abstract
This chapter analyses rural opposition to land privatization in the post-Soviet transition era that draws explicit parallels with the resistance by Russian peasants to early twentieth-century government programmes of land reform. It focuses on the failure of the effort to extend the policy of privatization to farmland, and the collapse of marketed output from the agricultural sector's large koholz units.
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