Scenarios about 'collectivization'
The process of transforming individual landholdings into collective farms owned by the state or cooperatives, most notably implemented in the Soviet Union under Stalin in the late 1920s and early 1930s. Collectivization aimed to increase agricultural production and eliminate kulaks (wealthy peasants) as a class, but often resulted in widespread famine, resistance, and millions of deaths. In alternate history scenarios, different approaches to collectivization or its absence altogether frequently serve as critical divergence points for communist regimes.
What If The Holodomor Never Occurred?
Exploring the alternate timeline where the devastating Soviet famine of 1932-33 was prevented, potentially altering the development of Ukraine, Soviet history, and the Cold War.