?
Jože Srebrnič, On the Agrarian Theses (1922)
Srebrnič had a biography similar to Godina, being also a participant in the October Revolution and a "Bordigist" active in Triest. However, unlike Godina, he was of a peasant background, and was an active social democrat before 1914, particularly interested in the peasant question. His 1922 theses were prepared for the Second Congress of the Italian Communist Party. It is significant not only for his then-maverick view of the necessity of agricultural collectivization, but also for the fact that he explicitly connected the importance of this issue to the definition of socialism as an economy without commodity production. This was mainstream in the Second and Third Internationals before Stalinism, but this central aspect of defining socialism had virtually been forgotten following Stalin's revision of the definition of socialism in the early 1930s. Also unlike Godina, Srebrnič stayed in the party despite his early misgivings, and died in the partisans in 1944, and being posthumously awarded the Order of the People's Hero.