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Libertarian Communism (journal) : ウィキペディア英語版 | Libertarian Communism (journal)
''Libertarian Communism'' was a socialist journal founded in 1974 and produced in part by members of the Socialist Party of Great Britain.〔"papers relating to Libertarian Communism (a splinter group of the SPGB) including journals and miscellaneous correspondence, 1970-1980 (1 box)""Socialist Party of Great Britain" at Archives Hub at the Great Research Centre〕 ==History== During the 1960s the Socialist Party of Great Britain was enthused by a healthy influx of new recruits initially politicised by the CND marches, Vietnam and the May Events of 1968. The boost to Party membership and activity at this time was considerable. Influenced by the prevailing political climate, some members who joined in this period wanted to change the emphasis of the Party’s propaganda efforts towards taking a more positive attitude to industrial struggles, claimants unions and tenants' associations but also to women's liberation and squatting, arguing that the Party had developed a somewhat idealist conception of how socialist consciousness arises, being divorced from the day-to-day struggles of workers. To this effect fifteen activists from the ‘sixties generation’ signed a mini-manifesto in 1973 entitled “Where We Stand” which was circulated inside the Party. Although these ‘rebels’ in the Party were never a homogenous group, many more long-standing and traditional Party members felt uncomfortable with their line of argument.
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