Vladimir "Vlado" Dapcevic (14 June 1917 – 12 July 2001) was a Montenegrin and Yugoslav communist and revolutionary who fought as a Partisan against Axis occupation troops and forces of the Independent State of Croatia during World War II.
He was a political dissident and after the war he opposed the revisionist policy of Josip Broz Tito, president of Yugoslavia.
He spent a total of 24 years in Yugoslav prisons as a political dissident for advocating anti-revisionism and Proletarian internationalism.
After the collapse of Yugoslavia in 1990s, he founded the Party of Labour in Serbia.
He criticised Tito, as well as Soviet leaders Nikita Khrushchev and Leonid Brezhnev, for departing from Marxism–Leninism.
He accused them for leaning towards capitalism and the latter two for exposing the Soviet Union to the collapse.
He was the younger brother of famous Montenegrin socialist leader Peko Dapcevic.