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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.
Catherine Samary is an economist and lecturer, she is the author of Yugoslavia Dismembered, writes for Le Monde Diplomatique, is a co-founder of the Espace Marx (Paris), and is a member of the council of ATTAC-France. Fred Leplat edited The Far Right In Europe and writes for Socialist Viewpoint.
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.