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2024 | Buch

Associated Labor and Production in the Age of Barbarism

Education Beyond Capital

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The book focuses on different practices of associated labor in Brazil and Argentina, in the case of the workers’ recuperated factories, over the past 40 years. Novaes analyses labor practices from a critical Marxist perspective as a reaction to the misery of neoliberalism. Deindustrialization, austerity programs, increasing commodification and international competitiveness have severely deteriorated the living and working conditions of the majority of Latin Americans. However, alternative labor, production and educational practices have developed in this increasingly ruthless neoliberal capitalism. Although they are still small, they indicate a potential way out of the capitalist mode of production. Novaes directs his special attention to the “education beyond capital,” which has accompanied these alternative labor and production practices (from alternative job training in recuperated companies and the movement of landless rural workers MST).

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. Labour as a Vital Need and Alienated Labour: Contributions to the Debate on the Relationship Between Labour and an Education Beyond Capital
Abstract
This chapter aims to reflect on labour as a vital need for human beings and on alienated labour in the capitalist mode of production. This is an introductory chapter on the subject, aimed mainly at education workers. As far as possible, we have tried to simplify the debate, but as the subject is complex, this has not been possible in some passages.
Henrique Tahan Novaes
Chapter 2. The Foundations of Self-Managed Socialism: The Contribution of István Mészáros
Abstract
Workers began to feel the need for self-management the first day that they were placed in a factory against their will. In the nineteenth century, cooperativism and mutual support societies gained force as a form of resistance against unemployment, principally during the industrial revolution in England. I should note that one of the main reasons mutual support societies were created was so that workers could have decent burials.
Henrique Tahan Novaes
Chapter 3. Brazilian Unions and the Struggle Against the Entrepreneurial-Military Dictatorship (1964–1985)
Abstract
The entrepreneurial-military dictatorship (1964–1985) had a significant impact on workers’ struggles in Brazil. Since President Getúlio Vargas’s terms in office (1930–1945 and 1950–1954), an urban working class developed along with urban and rural unions that were coupled to the state. The pre-coup years (1950–1964) were a period of increasing social reforms, including an expansion of Brazil’s unions. This chapter analyses workers’ struggles against the dictatorship between 1968 and 1985.
Henrique Tahan Novaes
Chapter 4. Manifestations of Barbarism
Abstract
We saw in the previous section that the “civilising” phase of capitalism ended in the late 1960s. Since then, capital has systematically denied workers the hard-fought achievements of the first half of the twentieth century: limited working hours, right to formal contracts, right to retirement and paid vacations, end of slave and child labour, right to housing, right to a public health system, etc. These and so many other achievements have been partially or completely destroyed in the new phase of capitalism, which some call “flexible accumulation” and others “capitalism under financial hegemony”.
Henrique Tahan Novaes
Chapter 5. An Overview of Urban Associated Labour in Brazil: Positive and Negative Aspects of Self-Management in the Productive Microcosm
Abstract
A structural crisis of capital has plagued workers in all parts of the world since the 1970s and brought far-reaching consequences: bankruptcy of the totalitarian democracy of finance capital and the outbreak of innumerable revolts against this “democracy”; precarious processes of urbanisation, including “slummification” and the rise of gated condominiums; concentration of income and land; mass incarceration of miserable workers; increased unemployment; structural precariousness of labour; and the intensification of labour, the return of labour analogous to slavery and the growth of child labour.
Henrique Tahan Novaes
Chapter 6. Cooperation and Workers’ Cooperatives in São Paulo’s MST: An Analysis of the Actions of the Capitalist State that Block the Educational Potential of Associated Labour
Abstract
Since the 1970s, we have been witnessing an offensive by capital. In Novaes et al. (2015), we outlined the main dimensions of this offensive: (a) pressure for the free movement of financial capital, resulting in a restructuring of production in the countryside and cities; (b) technological innovations that intensified the production and diversification of goods; (c) expansion of capital towards sectors and fields not yet subject to full commodification, such as health and education, with a wave of privatisation which took the cycle of commodification to a new level; and (d) the implementation of processes of corporate relocation and outsourcing.
Henrique Tahan Novaes
Chapter 7. Associated Labour as an Educational Principle: Notes from Worker-Recovered Factories in Brazil and Argentina
Abstract
This chapter aims to address school and non-school education in Latin American Recovered Factories (RF), especially in Brazil and Argentina. To achieve our goal, we made a brief assessment of the current historical moment and then tried to differentiate anti-capital struggles from localised struggles. In the third section, we made a brief retrospective of the first phase of the struggles of the Recovered Factories (hereinafter RFs) characterised by extreme creativity, embryos of de-alienation of work and adoption of self-management principles.
Henrique Tahan Novaes
Chapter 8. The National Training Centre in the Solidarity Economy: The Contradictions of Self-Management Education of the Solidarity Economy Movement
Abstract
This chapter aims to reflect on the contradictions of the Solidarity Economy Movement’s self-managed education. To do so, we rely on the experience of the National Centre for Training in Solidarity Economy (CFES—Nacional).
Henrique Tahan Novaes
Chapter 9. “Green Revolution”, Agroecology and the MST Agroecology Schools
Abstract
This chapter aims to reflect on the political economy of the “Green Revolution”, the debate on agroecology and the MST's agroecology schools. To achieve this objective, in the first section, we present a critical analysis of the so-called Green Revolution fetish, characterised by the concentration of land in the hands of few owners and transnational corporations, control of production and distribution of seeds, tractors, synthetic fertilisers and pesticides by corporations, besides the many socio-environmental problems it caused: cancer, destruction of the immune system, increased unemployment, indebtedness of small farmers, etc.
Henrique Tahan Novaes
Chapter 10. Notes on Social Movements and Education: Challenges of the Struggle Between Capital and Labour in Brazil
Abstract
This chapter aims to outline the relationship between social movements and education in light of the particularities of Brazilian capitalism. We start from an understanding that social movements are an expression of class struggle. However, there are different theoretical explanations for the existence of these movements and the way they develop.
Henrique Tahan Novaes
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
Associated Labor and Production in the Age of Barbarism
verfasst von
Henrique Tahan Novaes
Copyright-Jahr
2024
Electronic ISBN
978-3-031-51183-7
Print ISBN
978-3-031-51182-0
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-51183-7