Dual Power: Difference between revisions

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* 1921: China
* 1921: China
* 1944: Poland
* 1944: Poland
* 1945: Indonesia
* 1945: [[Indonesian National Revolution#Workers' Control|Indonesian National Revolution]]
* 1953: East Germany
* 1953: East Germany
* 1956: Hungary
* 1956: Hungary
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* 1974: Portugal
* 1974: Portugal
* 1975: Spain
* 1975: Spain
* 1978: Iran
* 1979: [[FEJUVE]] (Bolivia)
* 1979: [[FEJUVE]] (Bolivia)
* 1979: Iran
* 1980: Poland
* 1980: Poland
* 1999: Bolivia
* 1999: Bolivia
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* 2006: Mexico
* 2006: Mexico
* 2008: Greece
* 2008: Greece
* 2010: Spain
* 2011: [[Occupy Movement|Occupy]] (USA)
* 2011: [[Occupy Movement|Occupy]] (USA)
* 2011: [[Egyptian Revolution (2011)|Egyptian Revolution]]
* 2011: [[Egyptian Revolution (2011)|Egyptian Revolution]]
* 2012: Spain
* 2014: [[Bosnian Spring]]
* 2014: [[Bosnian Spring]]
* 2019: [[Chilean Uprising]]
* 2019: [[Chilean Uprising]]

Revision as of 21:32, 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