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An essay that sketches out the most common microeconomic and organizational challenges that Argentina's recuperated workplaces face and maps out the “social innovations” being spearheaded by them.
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Workers' management is not just a new administrative technique: it means that for the mass of people, new relations will have to develop with their work, the very content of work will have to alter.
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"The difference between councils and trade unions is that, while the latter lose their functions in a decaying capitalism, the former become a prefiguration of the organisation of socialist society."
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Dismantling the myth that the council communist tradition actually advocated a self-managed capitalist economy, rather than a truly communist one.
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Hilary Wainwright reflects on an attempt by British workers to produce a democratically determined alternative plan for their industry.
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