Departments of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union explained

The Departments of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union were all specialised in their own field, for example, the International Department handled Soviet relations with non-ruling communist parties.

Key

Departments

DepartmentResponsible forSections
  • Land cultivation
  • Mechanisation
  • Procurements
  • Reclamations and water economy
  • Forestry
  • (Agricultural) science
  • Special sections for certain territories, for instance, their existed a Northern Caucasus section.
  • Industrial and transportation construction
  • Urban economy
  • Timber and woodworking industry
  • Cinematography
  • Literature
  • Musical arts
  • Theater
  • Responsible for handling intra-Secretariat and intra-Central Committee housekeeping, the handling of incoming communications, and security for classified documents
  • Probably supervised TASS
  • The department's head acted as Leonid Brezhnev's Press Secretary
  • Responsible for maintaining ties with communist parties in non-socialist states.
  • Probably supervised the ministries the Foreign Cadres Department was responsible for.
  • Africa
  • Central Europe
  • Great Britain and the Commonwealth
  • Latin America
  • Near East
  • Southeast Asia
  • Scandinavia and Iceland
  • United States
  • International Social Organizations
  • Fisheries
  • Food Industry
  • Meat and Dairy Industry
  • Political organs in the armed forces, and through them, the Ministry of Defence, however, the Administrative Organs Department was also responsible for the defence ministry.
  • State Committee for Publishing, Printing and Book Trade (Pres.)
  • State Committee for Television and Radio (Pres.)
  • State Committee for Sports and Physical Culture (Pres.)
  • Propaganda-agitation work conducted by party, state or other organisations, the political education of party cadres, the publishing of newspapers and journals and cultural work for trade unions.
  • Cultural-enlightenment work
  • Economic education
  • Mass-political work
  • Newspapers
  • Party education
  • Printing industry and press distribution
  • Sports and physical culture
  • Television and Radio
  • Responsible for diplomatic ties with ruling communist parties
  • May have supervised the ministries of the Foreign Cadres Department, at least when it came to relations with ruling-communist parties.
  • Economic sciences
  • Higher educational institutions
  • Philosophy and scientific communism
  • Public health and social security
  • Schools
  • Specialised secondary- and vocational-technical education.
  • Ministry of Trade (U–R)
    • Consumers' Coops Republican ministries responsible for utilities and consumers's services.
Women
  • Women affairs.
align=left colspan=3Sources: How the Soviet Union is Governed (1979) pp. 412–417 and pp. 420–421