Agricultural commune

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Kibbutz members harvesting grain at Ein Harod

An agricultural commune is a commune based on agricultural labor. It is usually differentiated from other forms of collective agriculture by near-complete collective ownership of capital assets and collective consumption of the products of agriculture.

In his 1881 letter to Vera Zasulich, Karl Marx wrote that historically the obshchina, the traditional Russian "agricultural commune" was the most recent type of archaic forms of societies. Marx wrote that the following features distinguish the agricultural commune from more archaic forms of commune.[1]

  • Older communes were based on kinship
  • In an agricultural commune, the house and yard were private property
  • In an agricultural commune, the arable land was common but was periodically divided among members to till and to own crops from it, while in archaic communes production was carried out communally and the yield was shared out.

Marx regarded the ideal agricultural commune as utopian and not practical in the society of his time or the foreseeable future.[2]

Agricultural communes in the Soviet Union

Agricultural communes in non-Soviet societies

References

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