The liberatarian movement in Chile

Creator

Description

Mutualism and anarcho-syndicalism 1840 to 1996. Chile is one of the few countries where liberatarian ideology had hegemony over the labor movement. The Chilean movement gave rise to an unprecidented level of popular unity, albeit for a brief moment, unified the vast majority of the population against the elite. Chilean libertarianism was notable for its practicality, its populism and its unideological nature, and its lack of violence.

Publisher

Place of Publication

Date Created

Extent of Work

12

Table of Contents

Introduction -- The First Anarchism-The Mutualist Movement -- The Equality Society -- Teh SI Under Attack -- The First Mutual Aid Societies -- The Growth of Mutualism -- Mutualist Populism -- A Tragic Interlude - Balmaceda and Civil War -- National Federation -- Revolutionary Anarchism -- Other Types of Anarchism -- The Resistance Societies -- The Mancominales -- Anarchist Students and Teachers -- Anarcho - syndicalism -- The IWW -- Communists VS. Anarchists -- Repression of the Coup of 1927 -- Ibanez and the Corporate State -- Anarchism and Coporatism -- The Decline of Anarcho - Syndicalism -- The Popular Unity Government -- After the Golpe -- The Return of "Democracy" -- Bibliography -- Footnotes

Dimensions

14x22