Skip to content
Category

Syndicalism

page 1
planned economy
type of economic system
anarcho-syndicalism
thumb|upright=1.1|Members of the Anarchism in Spain|Spanish anarcho-syndicalist trade union CNT marching in [[Madrid with their red and black flags, 2010]]
utopian socialism
political theory concerned with imagined socialist societies
Q193974
right|thumb|upright=1.35|A photograph of the Great Chartist Meeting on Kennington Common, London, 1848
revolutionary syndicalism
thumb|Demonstration by the Argentine syndicalist union FORA in 1915
syndicate
A syndicate is a self-organizing group of individuals, companies, corporations or entities formed to transact some specific business, to pursue or promote a shared interest.
Industrial Workers of the World
international union founded in 1905
Confederación Nacional del Trabajo
Spanish trade union
workers' self-management
form of organizational management based on self-directed work processes on the part of an organization's workforce
Iberian Anarchist Federation
anarchist federation of the Iberian Peninsula
mutual aid
voluntary exchange of resources and services for mutual benefit
socialist sef-management
economic or business model practiced in Yugoslavia
national syndicalism
adaptation of syndicalism to suit the social agenda of integral nationalism
International Workers' Association – Asociación Internacional de los Trabajadores
The '''International Workers' Association – (IWA–AIT''') is an international federation of anarcho-syndicalist labor unions and initiatives.
guild socialism
political labor movement
Soviet Republic of Naissaar
former country
Workerism
Operaismo (Italian for "workerism") was a heterodox Marxist political and theoretical tendency that emerged in Italy in the early 1960s. Its foundational insight, a "Copernican revolution" in Marxist thought, was to invert the traditional relationship between capital and labour, positing that the struggles of the working class were the primary driving force of capitalist development. Capital, in this view, does not develop along its own internal laws but is forced to restructure and innovate in response to working-class antagonism.
Fasci Siciliani
popular movement in Sicily
Argentine Regional Workers' Federation
Argentina's first national labor confederation
De Leonism
libertarian communist ideology
Unione Sindacale Italiana
Italian trade union
International Confederation of Labor
International organization
Industrial unionism
labor union organizing model in which all workers in the same industry are organized into the same union
Revolt of the Languedoc winegrowers
rebellion
International Anarchist Congress of Amsterdam
congress which took place from 24 August to 31 August 1907; gathered delegates from 14 countries, among which important figures of the anarchist movement
Raniero Panzieri
Italian writer (1921-1964)
Kuzbass Autonomous Industrial Colony
Soviet experiment in workers' control
Minimum services
public services to be kept maintained during emergencies
National Labor Secretariat
Dutch syndicalist trade union confederation
Le Mouvement socialiste
French magazine
Treintism
Treintismo () was a libertarian socialist political movement in the Second Spanish Republic. Initially a faction within the National Confederation of Labour (CNT), the treintistas were, after the publication of the Manifesto of the Thirty in September 1931, expelled from the CNT over the course of the years 1931 and 1932 and formed the Syndicalist Party in 1932. The treintistas and the trade unions associated with them, the Opposition Syndicates, rejoined the CNT in 1936. The movement fell into political irrelevance with the victory of the Nationalist forces of Francisco Franco in the Spanish