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* 1974: Portugal | * 1974: Portugal | ||
* 1975: Spain | * 1975: Spain | ||
* 1979: Bolivia | * 1979: [[FEJUVE]] (Bolivia) | ||
* 1979: Iran | * 1979: Iran | ||
* 1980: Poland | * 1980: Poland | ||
* 1999: Bolivia | * 1999: Bolivia | ||
* 2001: Venezuela | * 2001: Venezuela | ||
* 2001: | * 2001: [[Argentinazo]] | ||
* 2006: Mexico | * 2006: Mexico | ||
* 2008: Greece | * 2008: Greece | ||
* 2011: [[Occupy Movement|Occupy]] (USA) | * 2011: [[Occupy Movement|Occupy]] (USA) | ||
* 2011: | * 2011: [[Egyptian Revolution (2011)|Egyptian Revolution]] | ||
* 2012: Spain | * 2012: Spain | ||
* 2014: | * 2014: [[Bosnian Spring]] | ||
* 2019: | * 2019: [[Chilean Uprising]] | ||
[[Category:Libertarian Socialist Wiki]] | [[Category:Libertarian Socialist Wiki]] | ||
[[Category:Dual Power]] | [[Category:Dual Power]] | ||
[[Category:Concepts]] | [[Category:Concepts]] |
Revision as of 03:02, 30 March 2020
Dual Power is a strategy within leftist theory that argues for the creation of alternative and counter-institutions (such as co-operatives, intentional communities, squats, protest camps) that exist parallel to the society you are trying to destroy.
Historical Examples of Large-Scale Dual Power
- 1910: Mexico
- 1917: Russia
- 1918: Poland
- 1918: Germany
- 1919: Italy
- 1920: Ireland
- 1921: China
- 1944: Poland
- 1945: Indonesia
- 1953: East Germany
- 1956: Hungary
- 1956: Poland
- 1962: Algeria
- 1968: Kraakers (Netherlands)
- 1969: Italy
- 1973: Argentina
- 1974: Portugal
- 1975: Spain
- 1979: FEJUVE (Bolivia)
- 1979: Iran
- 1980: Poland
- 1999: Bolivia
- 2001: Venezuela
- 2001: Argentinazo
- 2006: Mexico
- 2008: Greece
- 2011: Occupy (USA)
- 2011: Egyptian Revolution
- 2012: Spain
- 2014: Bosnian Spring
- 2019: Chilean Uprising