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Full Description
Did communists develop another model of Socialism in the 1960s and 1970s - `a decolonial communism'?
Do struggles and debates on the construction of socialism, in Yugoslavia and elsewhere, show a path to democracy and commons?
Against the backdrop of deepening inequalities with the introduction of `market socialism' in the mid-1960s, worker and student protested against a lack of respect for socialist values and for self-management rights.
Distinguished contributors review past and present experiences and reconsider discussions in the light of current thinking.:
• In Yugoslavia past and present, through the lens of Commons
• In Portugal and Chile, and Cuba in 1970s as essays in workers' control.
Catherine Samary uses a `decolonial' framework to consider relations of domination that can involuntarily mark political and intellectual relations - including those identifying with Marxism. Radical and egalitarian self-managed relations can mature only if they are at the heart of a real socialist system, and are not isolated in one country only.
Contents
From a decolonial Communism to the democracy of the Commons; Yugoslav self-management: a balance sheet; Workers' Councils in Yugoslavia: Successes and Failures; Plan, Market and Democracy; Building socialism in Cuba; Eastern Europe: revisiting the ambiguous revolutions of 1989; Feminism and the Politics of the Commons; Chile and Portugal in the 1970s: the left, nationalisations and `workers' control'; Latin America: state, popular power and class struggle.