women’s liberation – P2P Foundation https://blog.p2pfoundation.net Researching, documenting and promoting peer to peer practices Sun, 21 Oct 2018 11:31:24 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.5.15 62076519 ROAR Issue #8 : Beyond the Border https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/roar-issue-8-beyond-the-border/2018/10/25 https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/roar-issue-8-beyond-the-border/2018/10/25#respond Thu, 25 Oct 2018 08:00:00 +0000 https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/?p=73252 “I don’t believe in borders, I don’t like flags, I have no boundaries. My only homeland: friendship, love and justice for all.” Dedicated to the memory of Myra Landau (1926–2018) We are very excited to announce the launch of our eighth issue, on revolutionary internationalism in the twenty-first century. Beyond the Border features important contributions by a... Continue reading

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“I don’t believe in borders, I don’t like flags, I have no boundaries.
My only homeland: friendship, love and justice for all.”

Dedicated to the memory of
Myra Landau (1926–2018)

We are very excited to announce the launch of our eighth issue, on revolutionary internationalism in the twenty-first century. Beyond the Border features important contributions by a group of world-leading scholars, activists and organizers on the necessity of organizing across and beyond the border in the fields of workers’ internationalism, feminist internationalism, no-border activism, migrant and refugee solidarity, Black internationalism and much more.

You can now read the individual essays on our website or download the issue as a high-quality PDF. The issue is currently in press and should be delivered to print subscribers this autumn.

Please note that Issue #8 is our last issue to appear in print. For continued coverage of social struggles and revolutionary movements around the world make sure to keep following us at roarmag.org! If you value our work and want to continue supporting us, please consider becoming ROAR patron.

Read Issue #8 Online

A selection from the issue’s content:

Women’s Internationalism against Global Patriarchy

Dilar Dirik

Women’s liberation is at its heart a struggle for the liberation of all humanity from the most treacherous and insidious forms of oppression and domination. Read on ROAR

Africa’s Place in the Radical Imagination

Zoé Samudzi

Our internationalist concerns for Africa must necessarily transcend the flattened talking points to which the continent is frequently reduced in our discourses. Read on ROAR

Workers of the World

Erik Forman

To avert a descent into barbarism, the labor movement must develop an effective and innovative internationalist praxis uniting workers across borders. Read on ROAR

Beyond the Border Kaleidoscope

Natasha King

As borders change, they pose new challenges for migrant movements — yet those same movements also continue to radically transform the borders they oppose. Read on ROAR

Translocal Solidarity and the New Municipalism

Laura Roth & Bertie Russell

By conceiving of transformative social change in “translocal” terms, the municipalist movement enables us to redefine internationalism for our times. Read on ROAR

Towards a New Internationalism

Thomas Jeffrey Miley

If the class struggle is to be reignited, we must denounce the left’s resurgent social chauvinism. The worker, once again, must come to realize that she has no country. Read on ROAR

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Project of the Day: Cooperation in Mesopotamia https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/project-of-the-day-cooperation-in-mesopotamia/2018/08/24 https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/project-of-the-day-cooperation-in-mesopotamia/2018/08/24#respond Fri, 24 Aug 2018 08:00:00 +0000 https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/?p=72361 The following texts are extracted from Mesopotamia.coop A co-operative revolution is happening in Northern Syria People in Rojava are collectively building a society based on principles of direct democracy, ecology, and women’s liberation, with co-operation playing a crucial role in rebuilding their economy. In Bakur (the predominantly Kurdish region of eastern Turkey) people are setting up... Continue reading

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The following texts are extracted from Mesopotamia.coop

A co-operative revolution is happening in Northern Syria

People in Rojava are collectively building a society based on principles of direct democracy, ecology, and women’s liberation, with co-operation playing a crucial role in rebuilding their economy. In Bakur (the predominantly Kurdish region of eastern Turkey) people are setting up co-operatives within a similar democratic model, despite ongoing military repression by the state of Turkey.

Join us in building international solidarity between our co-operative movements.

Where is Mesopotamia?

Mesopotamia – the land ‘between two rivers,’ the Tigris and Euphrates – is also known as the cradle of civilisation. It’s a historical region that spanned the land now divided by the nation states of Syria, Iraq and parts of Turkey, Iran, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. It’s an approximate region, without borders. The same could be said of Kurdistan – ‘the land where Kurds live’ – another geographical region which has never been a country, whose people have been divided by some of those same nation states.

Unlike the term ‘Kurdistan’, ‘Mesopotamia’ is not bonded to any national identity, and its use reflects the spirit of pluralism that has emerged from the Kurdish freedom movement. Mesopotamia has always been highly ethnically and culturally diverse.

Co-operation in Mesopotamia researches and raises awareness about the developing co-operative economy in the Democratic Federation of Northern Syria, often referred to as Rojava (Kurdish for ‘West’), and also in Bakur (Kurdish for ‘North’), in southeastern Turkey.

What’s happening in Rojava?

In early 2011, citizen uprisings in Syria began, calling for the Regime to fall. By the end of 2012, this had spiralled into a proxy world war, with all of the world’s superpowers fighting on the battle ground of Syria via varying proxy forces.

It was in this environment, in the summer of 2012, that Kurds in the majority Kurdish city of Kobani on the Turkish border, announced their revolution. People took to the streets. The regime, already weakened and fighting heavily on other fronts, receded from the area. Now this Kurdish-led (but increasingly pluralist) social movement was able to begin putting into practice the model for a new paradigm that until now had been operating underground, in Syria as well as Turkey.

This ideology and the principles that underpin it are based on the political thought of Abdullah Ocalan, in a model he has termed Democratic Confederalism.

Rather than a nation state, this model is based on a matrix of autonomous, but accountable, neighbourhood assemblies (or ‘communes’), civil society organsiations, political parties, unions, co-operatives, etc. It seeks autonomy within currently existing borders, rather than an independent nation state. It works from the bottom up, via a system of rotating delegates, with quotas for men, women, and each of the different ethnic groups that make up the community.

This paradigm is based on three pillars: direct democracy, women’s liberation, and ecology ─ and co-operation plays a crucial role. The ultimate aim is for co-operatives to make up 80% of the economy in Rojava. Read more.

Why Co-operatives

The transition to a co-operative economy has been building slowly since the start of the Rojava Revolution. Having been built up from nothing, the co-operative economy now makes up about 7% of the economy of Jazira – the largest of three regions that make up the Democratic Federation of Northern Syria (DFNS).

3% of Jazira’s economy is now based on autonomous women’s co-operatives – an astounding feat.

We, as part of the co-operative and solidarity economy movements in the UK, are aiming to build real solidarity and relationships between co-operative movements both here and in the DFNS. We believe that only by developing their economy can this movement survive and thrive, and that we, as fellow co-operators, are well placed to support in this way – movement to movement, and co-op to co-op. Read more.

Find out more at Mesopotamia.Coop

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Basic Income & Women’s Liberation https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/basic-income-womens-liberation/2018/06/17 https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/basic-income-womens-liberation/2018/06/17#respond Sun, 17 Jun 2018 08:00:00 +0000 https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/?p=71406 The UK-based activist network Radical Assembly interviewed Barb Jacobson, coordinator of Basic Income UK and member of the board of Unconditional Basic Income Europe, about basic income and women’s liberation. Jacobson discusses the history of the “wages for housework” movement, connecting it to the contemporary movement for unconditional basic income. Republished from basicincome.org  

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The UK-based activist network Radical Assembly interviewed Barb Jacobson, coordinator of Basic Income UK and member of the board of Unconditional Basic Income Europe, about basic income and women’s liberation.

Jacobson discusses the history of the “wages for housework” movement, connecting it to the contemporary movement for unconditional basic income.


Republished from basicincome.org

 

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