Self-organization and internal democracy
SELF-ORGANIZATION AND INTERNAL DEMOCRACY IN POLITICAL MOVEMENTS AND PARTIES
PART I. 1. Class, self-organization and party in the classics
- References to Marx, Rosa Luxemburg, Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky
Resolution 12th CM - Socialist Democracy 1985
2 . History of the workers' movement
2.1. Self-organization in the revolutionary phases
- The Paris Commune
- The Soviets
- The Spanish revolution
2.2. Self-organization as a tool of class struggle in non-revolutionary periods
- Mutualism in Europe at the dawn of the workers' movement (late 18th century, early 19th century)
- German model versus French-Italian model
PART II.
3. Direct and indirect democracy
- Limits of representative democracy
- What is direct democracy?
3.1 Tradition and actuality of direct democracy in Latin America
- indigenous communities Ecuador, Bolivia, Peru,...
- Zapatistas
- Landless Movement in Brazil - Piqueter@s and recuperated companies in Argentina
3.2 Feminist critique of hierarchical and patriarchal organization
Democracy is not only a question of rules. Alternative models
Experiences of the World March of Women
New feminist wave
- horizontality - role and power of the assembly - consensus method
- absence of a leader
- refusal of representation
- inclusiveness
PART III.
4. The role of the revolutionary party
- political program
- political" and "social" divide. Avant-garde shortcuts. Electoralism.
- an example of socio-political subjectivation: the GKN's mutual aid society
5. Internal democracy within the party
- democratic centralism
- natural" functioning mechanisms
- compensatory mechanisms
Extracts from: The dictatorship of the proletariat and socialist democracy [1]
THE TYRANNY of STRUCTURELESSNESS by Jo Freeman aka Joreen [2]
Berit As: Master suppression techniques [3]