Unnatural Deaths in the USSR, 1928-1954Transaction Publishers, 1983年1月1日 - 63 頁 This astonishing and sobering account of government- and war-induced civilian deaths in the Soviet Union calculates that Soviet loss of life between 1928 and 1954 was far higher than Western exÂperts have ever believed. Applying mathematical techniques to Soviet demographic statistics, Dyadkin shows that Stalinist represÂsion and World War II must have taken the lives of between 43 and 52 million Soviet citizens. In the first period, 1929-36, one of collectivization, Stalin controlÂled and eliminated classes; during the Great Purge of 1937-38, milÂlions of Communist party members and bureaucrats were executed, and then the purge extended into the Red Army. Dyadkin shows that World War II took close to 30 million lives and that during 1950-53 another 450,000 died in prison camps. |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 12 筆
... economic settings . Nomads of the North American plains and civilization builders of the Mayan uplands , animist tribesmen settled along West Africa's Bight of Benin and Christian serfs of medieval Europe , Chinese peasants toiling ...
... economy ( and interna- tional relief ) must worry about sudden death through the fickleness of nature : wanderers at the edge of the Saharan desert , mountain people of the Himalayas , and other preliterate groups relegated to remote ...
... economy and the precision of managerial sciences against them , the odds of survival for the disfavored were low . In the areas of Nazi occu- pation under Hitler , in Mao's China , and in Khmer Rouge Cambodia , deliberately contrived ...
... to finance rapidly rising defense needs on a rapidly diminishing economic base . " But by its treatment of its own people — by deporting entire nationalities ( women , children , the elderly ) on charges of race treason Introduction 7.
... economy might be established overnight has more of the touch of the dreamer than the cold - blooded liquidator . For more information on the interna- tional factors affecting the Great Leap Forward , see Adam Introduction 11.
內容
15 | |
21 | |
3 Population Losses during the Class Elimination Period of 192936 | 23 |
192640195054 and the Gulag Population and Prison Death Rate 195054 | 27 |
5 Natural Death Rate 192740 and Losses from Repression and the SovietFinnish War of 193940 | 39 |
6 Birth and Death Rates from Unnatural Causes 192936 | 43 |
7 War Casualties and Losses Due to Privations during World War II | 49 |
8 Assumptions and Techniques | 57 |
9 Potential USSR Population Changes in 192650 without Repressive Policies and World War II | 59 |
10 Conclusion | 61 |
Selected Bibliography | |