chapter 13 Flashcards

1
Q

working conditions in towns

A
  • strict rules about discipline and punctuality and demands for productivity
  • fines for lateness, absent for more than a day led to getting fired
  • failures blamed on saboteurs
  • secret police encouraged workers to inform on each other
  • value of wages fell by half between 1928 and 1937
  • crime increased
  • biggest projects carried out by prisoners in gulags
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2
Q

better living conditions in towns

A
  • family benefits - free health service, paid holidays, insurance against accidents to, secured employment for women after they left school
  • leisure - sports and exercise encouraged
  • no economic depression unlike the west
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3
Q

worse conditions in towns

A
  • difficult to cope with rapid population growth
  • roads/water supply/power and transport couldn’t cope
  • some places had no bathhouses and no sewage systems, no street lights
  • urban population grew from 29 to 40 million from 1929-33
  • continued to increases during the 30s
  • not enough houses, no space on buses and trams
  • most families lived in overcrowded houses with other families
  • only 6% of moscow houses had more than one room
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4
Q

better conditions in the countryside

A
  • greater mechanisation made their work easier
  • offered free houses to join collectives
  • scientists brought in to collectives to improve their working conditions
  • some collectives had schools and hospitals
  • literacy rates increased during 1930s
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5
Q

worse conditions in the countryside

A
  • resented collectivisation as it went against the principles of the bolshevik revolution
  • opposition met with fierce treatment, so stalin introduced forced collectivisation and confiscated their land
  • they couldn’t move to the cities as they needed passports
  • MTS had members of the secret police
  • churches destroyed
  • frequent food shortages
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6
Q

treatment of party members

A
  • increased quality of life as they moved higher up the ladder
  • better housing, healthcare, and a villa known as a dacha
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7
Q

treatment of peasants

A
  • kulaks removed during the purges
  • worse conditions than town workers
  • produce was cheap so that it could feed people in towns
  • moved to towns for a better standard of living
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8
Q

treatment of town workers

A
  • 1.5 million workers gained management posts during the first 5 year plan
  • benefited from the expansion of higher education
  • rapid industrialisation led to removal of unemployment
  • increase in population led to poor conditions
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9
Q

education for women

A
  • 1929 - 20% of places in higher education reserved for women
  • 1940 - 40% of engineering students were women
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10
Q

family life for women

A
  • mid 1920s ussr had the highest divorce rate in europe
  • 1927 - 2/3 of marriages ended in divorce
  • mid 1930s - more difficult to get a divorce or abortion
  • high divorce fate had led to broken homes and homeless children
  • state encouraged family to stay together through propaganda
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11
Q

employment for women

A
  • encouraged to work in all sectors
  • expected to work full time and raise a family
  • state nurseries and crèches introduced
  • female workers in towns rose from 3 million to 13 million from 1928-40
  • workers children received free education and healthcare schemes
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12
Q

political position of women

A
  • remained second class citizens
  • 12.8% of women were party members in 1928
  • zhenotdel founded by kollontai and armand in 1919 - women in factories could be elected as delegates and report back where the revolution was not followed
  • published womens pages, held conferences during the 1920
  • abolished in 1930 as part of party reorganisation - stalin thought womens issues had been solved
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13
Q

persecution of ethnic groups

A
  • stalin distrusted national groups
  • wanted to turn them into soviet citizens
  • discouraged from speaking their own languages and practising their own customs
  • russian became compulsory in schools
  • key jobs went to russians
  • many who opposed this were purged
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14
Q

deportation and purges

A
  • moscow government strengthened
  • power of republics reduced to stop nationalism
  • groups that opposed stalins policies were deported
  • 1.25 millions people deported, many died during forced transportation
  • volga germans, kalmyks, crimean tartars, people of northern caucasus
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15
Q

ukraine

A
  • starved deliberately during famine of 1932-33
  • stalin thought they were seeking separation
  • purged leading ukrainian intellectuals
  • 5k arrested - later murdered or deported to siberia
  • accused of plotting an armed rebellion
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16
Q

border regions

A
  • 1935 onwards - cleansing operations in border regions
  • finnish, latvian and estonian families deported from leningrad to kazakhstan and siberia
  • polish and german families deported from kiev
17
Q

korean community

A
  • 1936 - 172k koreans moved from vladivostok and birobidzhan to uzbekistan and kazakhstan
  • deported by nkvd
  • took 124 railway convoys
  • stalin believed they were japanese spies