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Socialism in the Twentieth Century: a Historical Reflection
THE GLOBALIZATION & GOVERNANCE PROJECT, HOKKAIDO UNIVERSITY WORKING PAPER SERIES Socialism in the Twentieth Century: a historical reflection Ⅰ-11 Donald Sassoon, University of London * Paper for the Symposium, East Asia-Europe-USA Progressive Scholars’ Forum 2003 , 11-15 October, 2003. * None of these papers should be cited without the author’s permission. East Asia-Europe- USA Progressive Scholars’ Forum, 2003 Socialism in the Twentieth Century: a historical reflection Donald Sassoon Queen Mary, University of London 1. Introduction Those who venture to discuss the meaning of socialism confront two distinct but not incompatible strategies: the essentialist and the historical. The essentialist strategy proceeds in conventional Weberian fashion. Socialism is an ideal-type, empirically deduced from the activities or ideas of those commonly regarded as socialists. Once the concept is constructed, it can be used historically to assess concrete political organisations, their activists and thinkers and measure the extent to which they fit the ideal type, why and when they diverge from each other, and account for exceptional behaviour. This procedure, of great heuristic value, is still broadly accepted and widely used, even though its theoretical rigour is highly dubious as the analysis rests on a somewhat arbitrary selection of the ‘socialist’ organisations and individuals used to produce the ideal-type concept of socialism. This procedure has the added disadvantage that, if strictly adhered to, it does not allow for historical change. Once the ideal-type is defined, novel elements cannot easily be integrated into it. However, life must go on, even in sociology. So when something new turns up, such as a revisionist interpretation, all that is required is to hoist the ideal-type onto the operating table, remove -if necessary- the bits which no longer fit, and insert the new ones. -
African Socialism in Tanzania: Lessons of a Community Development Strategy for Rural Transformation in Developing Countries
ISSN 2039-2117 (online) Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences Vol 6 No 4 S2 ISSN 2039-9340 (print) MCSER Publishing, Rome-Italy July 2015 African Socialism in Tanzania: Lessons of a Community Development Strategy for Rural Transformation in Developing Countries Dr. Apuega R. Arikawei Dept of Educational Foundations, Niger Delta University, Wilberforce Island, Bayelsa State Email: [email protected] Doi:10.5901/mjss.2015.v6n4s2p540 Abstract In a bid to formulate an appropriate development strategy to curb the quagmire of the underdevelopment crisis of the continent, African leaders adopted various policy options to extricate her economies from the dominance of colonial hegemony. In Tanzania, the philosophy of African socialism was initiated at post-colonial independence to consolidate not only the true spirit of African brother-hood but also to achieve self-reliance which is the basic principle of community development. This paper examined the practices of African socialism as a nexus toward the actualization of self-reliance and rural development. It adopted the exploratory research and relied on the conceptual framework methodology to establish the relationship between the philosophy of African socialism and community development. This was done with a view to unravel the lessons that could be drawn by any society that desired to achieve community development under the context of the African experience. Keywords: African Socialism, Ujaama, Strategy, Transformation, Agriculture, Education, Community Development. 1. Introduction Across the globe, every nation tries to forge a process of attaining some forms of development to enhance better standard of living for its citizenry. The quest for development however polarized nations to advantaged and disadvantaged position. -
Interview with Jerry Mander, Author Of
This document is online at: http://ratical.org/ratville/AoS/theSun.html Below, an interview with the author of In the Absence of the Sacred: The Failure of Technology and the Survival of the Indian Nations. First, a few excerpts from the book itself: “ . technological evolution is leading to something new: a worldwide, interlocked, monolithic, technical-political web of unprecedented negative proportions.” (p. 4) “ . We have lost the understanding that existed in all civilizations prior to ours, and that continues to exist on Earth today in societies that live side by side with our own; we have lost a sense of the sacredness of the natural world.” (p. 187) “ . We still have not developed an effective language with which to articulate our critiques [of the technological juggernaut]. This, in turn, is because we ourselves are part of the machine and so we have difficulty defining its shape and direction. But even if we have this difficulty, there are societies of people on this planet who do not. STATEMENT TO THE MODERN WORLD Millions of people still alive on this earth never wished to be part of this machine and, in many cases, are not. they are still aware of certain fundamental truths, the most important of which require reverence for the earth—an idea that is subversive to Western society and the entire technological direction of the past century. These are people whose ancestors and who themselves have said from the beginning of the technological age that our actions and attitudes are fatally flawed, since they are not grounded in a real understanding of how to live on the earth. -
Ludwig Von Mises, Socialism: an Economic and Sociological Analysis [1922]
The Online Library of Liberty A Project Of Liberty Fund, Inc. Ludwig von Mises, Socialism: An Economic and Sociological Analysis [1922] The Online Library Of Liberty This E-Book (PDF format) is published by Liberty Fund, Inc., a private, non-profit, educational foundation established in 1960 to encourage study of the ideal of a society of free and responsible individuals. 2010 was the 50th anniversary year of the founding of Liberty Fund. It is part of the Online Library of Liberty web site http://oll.libertyfund.org, which was established in 2004 in order to further the educational goals of Liberty Fund, Inc. To find out more about the author or title, to use the site's powerful search engine, to see other titles in other formats (HTML, facsimile PDF), or to make use of the hundreds of essays, educational aids, and study guides, please visit the OLL web site. This title is also part of the Portable Library of Liberty DVD which contains over 1,000 books and quotes about liberty and power, and is available free of charge upon request. The cuneiform inscription that appears in the logo and serves as a design element in all Liberty Fund books and web sites is the earliest-known written appearance of the word “freedom” (amagi), or “liberty.” It is taken from a clay document written about 2300 B.C. in the Sumerian city-state of Lagash, in present day Iraq. To find out more about Liberty Fund, Inc., or the Online Library of Liberty Project, please contact the Director at [email protected]. -
Industrial Development of the Community Problems
COMMISSION 0 F THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES Reports n° 2 INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE COMMUNITY PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS Rapporteurs R. Lombardi G. Ventejol J. Boissonnat liJ I 01 .....N N .....N (f) .....N Ill I N,.... ..... 0 Conference "Industry and society in the european Community" .....It) Venice 1972 CON~,ERENCE "INDUSTRY AND SOCIETY IN THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITY THE INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE COMMUNITY PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS. by Ro LOHBARDI COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES VENICE - 1972 INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE EEC PROBLEMS AND PERSPECTIVES PREMISE t Twenty-seven years ago, almost to the day, the Second World conflict came to a close. The end of the war found European countries in a state of exhaustion, civil structures almost non- existent, factories destroyed. One had to start from nothing and the will for restarting seemed stifled by a crisis of discouragement and mistrust. A large portion of the population was still suffering from the recent events with an attitude of resignation, of indifference of passive protest: "Ohne uns"; "without us". The rapid succession and multiplicity of events, the new problems arising which today's society denounces, make that epoch seem far away; however, they cannot make one forget the constructive ability with which industry, above all, responded and reacted to this feeling of bewilderment. If I dwell on this topic, it is to recall briefly our recent history, simply because it seems right to me to underline the worth and continuity of the role played by industry and the constructive thoughts which derived from it for the development of society, in the changeable and varied needs it has since expressed. -
The Role of Cooperatives in Community Development: the Case of the Motloulela Farming Cooperative
The role of cooperatives in community development: The case of the Motloulela Farming Cooperative by Molebo Pretty Mohlala Thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree Masters in Public Administration in the faculty of Management Science at Stellenbosch University Supervisor: Prof Firoz Khan March 2020 Stellenbosch University https://scholar.sun.ac.za Declaration By submitting this thesis electronically, I declare that the entirety of the work contained therein is my own, original work, that I am the sole author thereof (safe to the extent explicitly otherwise stated), that reproduction and publication thereof by Stellenbosch University will not infringe any third party rights and that I have not previously in its entirety or in part submitted it for obtaining any qualification. M.P Mohlala Date: March 2020 Copyright © 2020 Stellenbosch University All rights reserved i Stellenbosch University https://scholar.sun.ac.za Abstract Most rural communities in South Africa struggle with poverty, unemployment and social collapse. To address these difficulties, many residents work collectively in cooperatives, united in the belief that they can achieve more than when working individually. Cooperatives represent a resilient, vibrant and viable economic alternative in bringing people together to work towards a common goal and meeting their shared needs through cooperation. However, while most of the cooperatives in South Africa are largely weak or failing, there remain a few strong and vibrant cooperatives able to provide an economic boost to their communities. This study adopted a qualitative approach and utilised case-study research design to conduct qualitative research into the role of the Motloulela Farming Cooperative (MFC) (Limpopo) in community development. -
Sustainability, the Social Economy, and the Eco-Social Crisis: Traveling Concepts and Bridging Fields
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Athabasca University Library Institutional Repository Sustainability, the Social Economy, and the Eco-social Crisis: Traveling Concepts and Bridging Fields by Lena K. Soots Centre for Sustainable Community Development – Simon Fraser University BC–Alberta Social Economy Research Alliance (BALTA) Michael Gismondi Athabasca University BC–Alberta Social Economy Research Alliance (BALTA) June 2008 LKSoots & MGismondi (June 2008) 1 Copyright © 2010, Canadian Centre for Community Renewal (CCCR) on behalf of the B.C.-Alberta Social Economy Research Alliance For further information, contact the BC-Alberta Social Economy Research Alliance, PO Box 1161, Port Alberni, B.C. V9Y 7M1, (tel) 250-723-2296 Website: www.socialeconomy-bcalberta.ca e-mail: [email protected] Author Information Lena K. Soots is a doctoral candidate in the Faculty of Education at Simon Fraser University. Lena is also an Instructor/Researcher with the Centre for Sustainable Community Development at Simon Fraser University. She has worked with BALTA as a student researcher on various research projects since 2006. Dr. Michael Gismondi is Professor of Sociology at Athabasca University. and Director of AU’s Master of Arts in Integrated Studies program until 2010. Mike is an Adjunct Professor of Sociology at the University of Alberta and a Research Fellow with the Centre for Research in Latin American and Caribbean Studies at York University. This paper has been produced as part of the research program of the BC- Alberta Social Economy Research Alliance (BALTA). Financial support from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) is gratefully acknowledged. -
Cooperative Localism: Federal-Local Collaboration in an Era of State Sovereignty
DAVIDSON_BOOK 5/17/2007 5:10 PM COOPERATIVE LOCALISM: FEDERAL-LOCAL COLLABORATION IN AN ERA OF STATE SOVEREIGNTY Nestor M. Davidson* INTRODUCTION................................................................................... 960 I. BACKGROUND: FEDERAL-LOCAL COOPERATION AND CONSTITUTIONAL STRUCTURE................................................... 964 A. The Importance of Direct Federal-Local Cooperation...... 966 B. Local Autonomy and the Intermediary of the States.......... 975 II. LOCAL GOVERNMENT POWERLESSNESS AND STATE SOVEREIGNTY .............................................................................. 979 A. Plenary State Control of Local Governments and the Unitary State........................................................................... 980 B. Modern Federalism, State Sovereignty, and Local Governments.......................................................................... 984 III. THE TRADITION OF FEDERAL EMPOWERMENT OF LOCAL GOVERNMENTS ............................................................................ 990 A. Cracks in the Façade of the Unitary State............................ 991 1. Local Disaggregation from the States............................ 991 2. Shadow Constitutional Protection for Local Autonomy ........................................................................ 994 B. Federal Empowerment of Local Governments .................. 995 1. Autonomy and the Authority to Act.............................. 996 2. Fiscal Federalism, Local Spending, and State Interference ..................................................................... -
Transforming Capitalism Through Real Utopias
ASRXXX10.1177/000312241246 4688828882American Sociological ReviewWright 2012 2012 Presidential Address American Sociological Review 78(1) 1 –25 Transforming Capitalism © American Sociological Association 2012 DOI: 10.1177/0003122412468882 through Real Utopias http://asr.sagepub.com Erik Olin Wrighta Abstract This address explores a broad framework for thinking sociologically about emancipatory alter- natives to dominant institutions and social structures, especially capitalism. The framework is grounded in two foundational propositions: (1) Many forms of human suffering and many defi- cits in human flourishing are the result of existing institutions and social structures. (2) Trans- forming existing institutions and social structures in the right way has the potential to substan- tially reduce human suffering and expand the possibilities for human flourishing. An emancipa- tory social science responding to these propositions faces four broad tasks: specifying the moral principles for judging social institutions; using these moral principles as the standards for diagnosis and critique of existing institutions; developing an account of viable alternatives in response to the critique; and proposing a theory of transformation for realizing those alterna- tives. The idea of “real utopias” is one way of thinking about alternatives and transformation. “There is no alternative” – Margaret and social structures. My focus is mainly on Thatcher, early 1980s the problem of alternatives to capitalism, but “Another world is possible” – motto of the aUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison World Social Forum, 2000s Corresponding Author: Erik Olin Wright, Department of Sociology, In this address I explore a broad frame- University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1180 work for thinking sociologically about eman- Observatory Drive, Madison, WI 53706 cipatory alternatives to dominant institutions E-mail: [email protected] 2 American Sociological Review 78(1) much of what I have to say would apply to ways that deepen and broaden the possibility other dominant institutions as well. -
Participatory Economics & the Next System
Created by Matt Caisley from the Noun Project Participatory Economics & the Next System By Robin Hahnel Introduction It is increasingly apparent that neoliberal capitalism is not working well for most of us. Grow- ing inequality of wealth and income is putting the famous American middle class in danger of becoming a distant memory as American children, for the first time in our history, now face economic prospects worse than what their parents enjoyed. We suffer from more frequent financial “shocks” and linger in recession far longer than in the past. Education and health care systems are being decimated. And if all this were not enough, environmental destruction continues to escalate as we stand on the verge of triggering irreversible, and perhaps cataclys- mic, climate change. yst w s em p e s n s o l s a s i s b o i l p iCreated by Matt Caisley o fromt the Noun Project r ie s & p However, in the midst of escalating economic dysfunction, new economic initia- tives are sprouting up everywhere. What these diverse “new” or “future” economy initiatives have in common is that they reject the economics of competition and greed and aspire instead to develop an economics of equitable cooperation that is environmentally sustainable. What they also have in common is that they must survive in a hostile economic environment.1 Helping these exciting and hopeful future economic initiatives grow and stay true to their principles will require us to think more clearly about what kind of “next system” these initiatives point toward. It is in this spirit -
Green Parties and Elections to the European Parliament, 1979–2019 Green Par Elections
Chapter 1 Green Parties and Elections, 1979–2019 Green parties and elections to the European Parliament, 1979–2019 Wolfgang Rüdig Introduction The history of green parties in Europe is closely intertwined with the history of elections to the European Parliament. When the first direct elections to the European Parliament took place in June 1979, the development of green parties in Europe was still in its infancy. Only in Belgium and the UK had green parties been formed that took part in these elections; but ecological lists, which were the pre- decessors of green parties, competed in other countries. Despite not winning representation, the German Greens were particularly influ- enced by the 1979 European elections. Five years later, most partic- ipating countries had seen the formation of national green parties, and the first Green MEPs from Belgium and Germany were elected. Green parties have been represented continuously in the European Parliament since 1984. Subsequent years saw Greens from many other countries joining their Belgian and German colleagues in the Euro- pean Parliament. European elections continued to be important for party formation in new EU member countries. In the 1980s it was the South European countries (Greece, Portugal and Spain), following 4 GREENS FOR A BETTER EUROPE their successful transition to democracies, that became members. Green parties did not have a strong role in their national party systems, and European elections became an important focus for party develop- ment. In the 1990s it was the turn of Austria, Finland and Sweden to join; green parties were already well established in all three nations and provided ongoing support for Greens in the European Parliament. -
Interview with Kirkpatrick Sale Arthur Versluis
Interview with Kirkpatrick Sale Arthur Versluis Journal for the Study of Radicalism, Volume 2, Number 2, 2009, pp. 133-145 (Article) Published by Michigan State University Press DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/jsr.0.0001 For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/254912 [ This content has been declared free to read by the pubisher during the COVID-19 pandemic. ] Interview with Kirkpatrick Sale ■ Arthur Versluis, Michigan State University irkpatrick Sale’s writing career began in the early 1970s, his first major book being SDS, the first extensive history of that seminal Kpolitical movement. Over the ensuing decades, he has continued to publish influential books, especially on bioregionalism and ecological issues, but early in the twenty-first century, he became active in the North American secessionist movement. He founded the Middlebury Institute, devoted to the ethos of decentralization, and organized secessionist conferences that brought together all the major and disparate secessionist groups in the United States, perhaps the most vigorous of which is the movement for the Second Vermont Republic. Over the course of the interview, we discussed the range of Sale’s many books, and how his more abstract points in them about bioregionalism and ecological issues become practically expressed by way of the secessionist movement that he now champions. We sat together in his booklined study, behind us dense woods visible through the window, and began by reflecting on the New Left in relation to his more recent and more radical work. AV: I’m sitting in the study with Kirkpatrick Sale. I wanted to start by just asking you about SDS [Students for a Democratic Society] and your 1973 book SDS.