The discussion between supporters of pro-independentist views and promoters of a federal resolution, which spread to Russian-ruled
Dnieper Ukraine, resulted in the publication of Mykola Mikhnovsky's
pamphlet Independent Ukraine. According to
Ivan Lysiak-Rudnytsky, that publication expressed the worldview of young members of the Revolutionary Ukrainian Party, who combined formulas of simplified
Marxism with romantic patriotism. Mikhnovsky's brochure issued the motto of "one, united, indivisible, free, independent Ukrainian state from the
Carpathians and up to the
Caucasus", and presented a demand to return Ukraine's national rights defined by the
Pereyaslav Agreement of 1654 and spread their action to the whole Ukrainian ethnic territory inside of the Russian Empire. Another significant publication of the RUP,
Uncle Dmytro, was published by Dmytro Antonovych on the base of a reworked pamphlet issued by the
Polish Socialist Party. Addressed to Ukrainian peasants, it showed the Russian imperial
tax system as unjust, and was soon followed by another brochure,
Does corvée still exist in our days? These works demonstrated the predominantly peasant orientation of the RUP, which was characteristic of the broader Ukrainian Socialist movement at the time. Later publications of the party included several newspapers, brochures and
pocketbooks, a series on the history of
Cossacks, translations of articles by
August Bebel,
Karl Liebknecht and
Karl Kautsky, publications of works by
Volodymyr Vynnychenko and Oleksandr Skoropys-Yoltukhovsky etc. The party produced its printed materials in Chernivtsi and Lviv, and would also employ underground printing shops in lands of Central and Eastern Ukraine. ==Legacy==