Anarchist-Communism and Mutual Aid: The revolutionary thought of Peter Kropotkin

October 9, 2009

Yet another university essay. Footnotes aren’t in this post, so if anyone wants to know where something is from either work it out yourselves from the bibliography at the bottom, or ask in a comment :)

Anarchist-Communism and Mutual Aid: The revolutionary thought of Peter Kropotkin

Peter Kropotkin combined a lifelong passion for revolutionary working class politics with scientific work in the fields of geography, zoology and evolutionary biology. In the field of politics, he is known as one of the founding figures of the anarchist-communist school of thought, while in evolutionary science his theory of mutual aid as a factor in evolution continues to wield influence today. While Kropotkin engaged in both the political and the scientific arenas, the two mostly remained separate – other anarchists of the time paid far more attention to his political works such as The Conquest of Bread and Field, Factories and Workshops than they did his scientific works like Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution. Likewise, Kropotkin’s fellow scientists predominantly did not adopt anarchist-communist politics. This essay will examine the history of anarchist-communist politics and of the concept of mutual aid, and discuss some areas where they overlap and the theory of mutual aid can be used to support anarchist-communism.

Kropotkin and the development of anarchist-communism

Anarchist-communist politics stress “egalitarianism and the abolition of social hierarchy and class distinctions that arise from unequal wealth distribution, the abolition of capitalism and money, and the collective production and distribution of wealth by means of voluntary associations”.1 The anarchist-communist Aotearoa Workers Solidarity Movement defines an anarchist-communist society as one where “society would be run by a federation of workplace and community councils, with everyone having a say in decisions that affect them. Resources and property would be communally owned and controlled by everyone. Production would be geared to satisfying everyone’s needs, people would give voluntarily according to their ability, and produce would be distributed freely according to need.”2 Along with figures such as the Frenchman Joseph Déjacque and Italians Carlo Cafiero and Errico Malatesta, Kropotkin was an important early theorist of anarchist-communism.

Prior to the rise of anarchist-communism, the dominant strain of thought amongst anarchists was collectivist anarchism, based primarily on the work of theorists and activists such as Mikhail Bakunin and James Guillaume. Anarchist-communism primarily differed with collectivist anarchism over the issue of money in a post revolutionary society. While both collectivists and communists support the socialisation of the means of production, collectivists “express[es] a state of things in which all necessaries for production are owned in common by the labour groups and the free communes, while the ways of retribution [i.e. distribution] of labour, communist or otherwise, would be settled by each group for itself.”3 Iain McKay notes that

while communism and collectivism both organise production in common via producers’ associations, they differ in how the goods produced will be distributed. Communism is based on free consumption of all while collectivism is more likely to be based on the distribution of goods according to the labour contributed. However, most anarcho-collectivists think that, over time, as productivity increases and the sense of community becomes stronger, money will disappear. Both agree that, in the end, society would be run along the lines suggested by the communist maxim: “From each according to their abilities, to each according to their needs.” They just disagree on how quickly this will come about.4

Anarchist-communists such as Kropotkin saw collectivist anarchism as fundamentally flawed. In What Is Anarchism?, Alexander Berkman noted that anarchist collectivism “begins by abolishing private ownership of the means of production and immediately reverses itself by returning to the system of remuneration according to work performed which means the re-introduction of inequality.”5 In contrast, “The abolition of wage labour is central to anarchist communism … Anarchist communists argue that there is no valid way of measuring the value of any one person’s economic contributions because all wealth is a collective product of current and preceding generations.”6 Anarchist-communism, therefore, can surmised as boiling down to one simple concept: from each according to their ability, to each according to their need. From there, all that stands in the way (the state, capitalism, racism, sexism etc.) must be opposed.

Kropotkin’s major works on anarchist-communism are The Conquest of Bread, a collection of essays first published in French in two anarchist journals that Kropotkin edited, and Fields, Factories and Workshops: or Industry Combined with Agriculture and Brain Work with Manual Work, also a collection of essays. The Conquest of Bread consists of a series of arguments against capitalism and the state, and for anarchist-communism. In it, Kropotkin states that a tendency towards anarchism exists in all societies, noting that “Thus we find a tendency, eminently communistic, springing up on all sides, and in various guises, in the very heart of theoretically individualist societies.”7 Fields, Factories and Workshops, meanwhile, is a hypothetical examination of some of the ways in which an anarchist-communist society might organise itself, and its production and distribution. Kropotkin argues that scientific progress has given the working class and peasantry glimpses of possibility of a better future, and that these victories “been won by the obscure tillers of the soil, from whose hands greedy States, land lords and middlemen snatch the fruit of their labour even before it is ripe; by obscure teachers who only too often fall crushed under the weight of Church, State, commercial competition, inertia of mind and prejudice.”8

Mutual aid and evolution

Peter Kropotkin based his book Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution on his studies of wildlife in Eastern Siberia and Northern Manchuria. While there, he noticed that

even in those few spots where animal life teemed in abundance, I failed to find — although I was eagerly looking for it — that bitter struggle for the means of existence, among animals belonging to the same species, which was considered by most Darwinists (though not always by Darwin himself) as the dominant characteristic of struggle for life, and the main factor of evolution.9

Kropotkin was not the first to suggest that mutual aid amongst animals was a contributing factor to the evolutionary process. Mutual aid was, in the 19th century, a relatively common position amongst Russian naturalists, including Nikolai D. Nozhin, who “argued that intraspecific relations were normally characterised, not by competition, but by mutual aid.”10

Iain McKay notes that Kropotkin’s work was aimed at “rebutting the misuse of evolutionary theory to justify the status quo, but its synthesis of zoological, anthropological, historical and sociological data achieved far more and, consequently, its influence is great.”11 That the book had great influence is further reinforced by Lee Alan Dugatkin, Professor of Evolutionary Biology at the University of Louisville, who writes that “[i]t is arguable that of all the books on co-operation written by biologists, Kropotkin’s Mutual Aid had the most profound affect on biologists, social scientists, and laymen alike.”12

Amongst many biologists, Kropotkin’s ideas still hold sway today. Stephen J Gould, the noted evolutionary biologist and science historian, states that he “would hold that Kropotkin’s basic argument is correct. Struggle does occur in many modes, and some lead to cooperation among members of a species as the best pathway to advantage for individuals. If Kropotkin overemphasized mutual aid, most Darwinians in Western Europe had exaggerated competition just as strongly.”13

Mutual aid and anarchism

While Mutual Aid was not as widely read amongst anarchists as his political work, Kropotkin believed that his scientific work gave a powerful basis to his political work. Anarchists have used the term mutual aid to describe the social relations they wish to see replace capitalism, for example:

Mutual aid is a term used to describe interactions based on cooperation rather than competition. Under capitalism, we are compelled to compete with each other to survive – for jobs, for property and for friendships. While capitalism demands we ask why we should help someone, mutual aid encourages us to ask why not.14

In line with his anarchism, Kropotkin believed that mutual aid could not exist between classes. He asked rhetorically “[w]hat solidarity can exist between the capitalist and the worker he exploits? Between the head of an army and the soldier? Between the governing and the governed?”15 McKay argues that Mutual Aid is still an important work for anarchists as “many of the justifications for capitalism (on the right) and for state intervention (on the left) retain some traces of the old Social Darwinian rationale he combated in the 19th century. “16

Conclusion

Kropotkin’s work on political theory played a key role in the development of the mass anarchist-communist movement of the late 1800s and early 1900s. His position amongst anarchists may be unparalleled, with Bakunin being the only possible exception. Likewise, his scientific work on mutual aid is still seen as important, and while it is often minimised by those who talk of Darwin’s theories, Kropotkin’s work is undoubtedly still an influence on modern evolutionary biologists. While Mutual Aid did not necessarily influence anarchist theory, it provided it with a further scientific backing, perhaps increasing its legitimacy in the eyes of some.

Bibliography

Anarchist Federation, ‘Anarchist communism – an introduction’, http://libcom.org/thought/anarchist-communism-an-introduction (28 September 2009).

Aotearoa Workers Solidarity Movement, ‘Aims & Principles’, 2009, http://awsm.org.nz/? page_id=14 (28 September 2009).

Aotearoa Workers Solidarity Movement, An Anarchist-Communist Reader (Wellington: Aotearoa Workers Solidarity Movement, 2008), p. 5.

Berkman, Alexander, What Is Anarchism? (Oakland: AK Press, 2003), p.230.

Dugatkin, Lee Alan, Cooperation Among Animals: An Evolutionary Perspective (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997), p. 8.

Gould, Stephen Jay, ‘Kropotkin was no crackpot’, 1997, http://libcom.org/library/kropotkin-was-no-crackpot (28 September 2009).

Kropotkin, Peter, ‘Fields, Factories and Workshops: or Industry Combined with Agriculture and Brain Work with Manual Work: Chapter 9: Conclusion’, 1912, http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/anarchist_archives/kropotkin/fieldsch9.html (28 September 2009).

Peter Kropotkin, ‘Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution: Introduction’, 1902, http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/Anarchist_Archives/kropotkin/mutaidintro.html (28 September 2009).

Kropotkin, Peter, ‘The Conquest of Bread: Chapter III – Anarchist Communism’, 1906, http://libcom.org/library/conquestofbread1906peterkropotkin3 (28 September 2009).

Kropotkin, Peter, Words Of A Rebel (Ottawa: Black Rose Books, 1996), p. 30.

McKay, Iain, An Anarchist FAQ: Volume 1 (Oakland: AK Press, 2009), p. 64.

McKay, Iain, ‘Mutual Aid: An Introduction and Evaluation’, 2008, http://anarchism.pageabode.com/anarcho/mutual-aid-an-introduction-and- evaluation (28 September 2009).


Solidarity Issue #4 out now! Free newssheet from AWSM

July 9, 2009

Issue 4 - July 2009

Download issue in .pdf format (1.79MB)

The fourth issue of Solidarity, free newssheet of the Aotearoa Workers Solidarity Movement. Download the .pdf above, or click below to read the contents online.

Contents:

If you want to make sure you don’t miss an issue of Solidarity, you can subscribe to either the print or electronic version.

To subscribe to the AWSM announcements list, put your email address in the form on the top right of each page on our website, http://www.awsm.org.nz.

Subscribers will be sent .pdf copies of Solidarity each month, along with other publications produced by AWSM and ocasional information – we promise we won’t spam you with a ton of useless stuff though! The electronic copy is identical to the print version.

Or, you can subscribe to the print edition to receive a copy of Solidarity in the post. $8 for 12 issues. Mail a cheque to AWSM, PO Box 6387, Wellington 6141, or contact us to organise an alternative method of payment.


Solidarity Issue #3 out now! Free newssheet by AWSM

May 14, 2009

Issue 3 - May 2009Download issue in .pdf format (1.23MB)

The third issue of Solidarity, free monthly newssheet of the Aotearoa Workers Solidarity Movement. Download the .pdf above, or click below to read the contents online. This issue has a special feature on May Day, international workers day.

Contents:

If you want to make sure you don’t miss an issue of Solidarity, you can subscribe to either the print or electronic version.

To subscribe to the AWSM announcements list, put your email address in the form on the top right of each page on our website, http://www.awsm.org.nz.

Subscribers will be sent .pdf copies of Solidarity each month, along with other publications produced by AWSM and ocasional information – we promise we won’t spam you with a ton of useless stuff though! The electronic copy is identical to the print version.

Or, you can subscribe to the print edition to receive a copy of Solidarity in the post. $8 for 12 issues. Mail a cheque to AWSM, PO Box 6387, Wellington 6141, or contact us to organise an alternative method of payment.


Solidarity Issue #2 out now! Free newssheet by AWSM

April 12, 2009

Issue 2 - April 2009Download issue in .pdf format (2.87MB)

The second issue of Solidarity, free monthly newssheet of the Aotearoa Workers Solidarity Movement. Download the .pdf above, or click below to read the contents online.

Contents:

If you want to make sure you don’t miss an issue of Solidarity, you can subscribe to either the print or electronic version.

To subscribe to the AWSM announcements list, email info [at] awsm.org.nz. Subscribers will be sent .pdf copies of Solidarity each month, along with other publications produced by AWSM and occasional information – we promise we won’t spam you with a ton of useless stuff though! The electronic copy is identical to the print version. And, of course, it’s free!

Or, you can subscribe to the print edition to receive a copy of Solidarity in the post. $8 for 12 issues. Mail a cheque to AWSM, PO Box 6387, Wellington 6141, or contact us to organise an alternative method of payment.


An equal society? Race and class divisions in modern New Zealand society

April 11, 2009

Another day, another university essay…

This one was in response to the following essay question:

Leslie Lipson wrote in 1948 that “if any sculptured allegory was to be placed at the approaches of Auckland or Wellington harbour, it would assuredly be a statute of Equality.” Do you think this remains the case in 2009? Discuss.

My original plan had been to also include immigration related things in the Race section, and to have a 3rd Partiarchy section, but unfortunately I ran out of both time and space to do them.

An equal society? Race and class divisions in modern New Zealand society

If we visualise Wellington harbour, the sea glistening on a beautiful summer’s day. A great sculpture, standing at its entrance, proclaiming to all a particular value, feature or characteristic that holds true across New Zealand society, what would that sculpture be? At least two possibilities hold true: a rifle wielding colonist, poised to steal land from a Maori community or perhaps a boss hoarding profit while using a mound of workers as a footstool. These social divisions of race and class , seen time and time again across New Zealand history, present the true face of New Zealand as a modern, capitalist, representative democracy.

Race – colonisation and resistance

Since the beginning of European colonisation of New Zealand, Maori have struggled to maintain their land and culture. Sometimes this took the form of open warfare, for example resistance led by Te Kooti in and around the Waikato.1 In other parts of the country self-imposed isolation was attempted, such as in Tuhoe, especially during the time of Rua Kenana and his settlement Hiruharama Hou, or New Jerusalem.2 Yet other Maori chose non-violent resistance to maintain their mana, as occurred in Parihaka under Te Whiti-o-Rongomai and Tohu Kakahi.3 Regardless of the methods chosen, resistance was the general theme amongst Maori as British colonisers began to exert their power and control over these islands.

Today, we still see resistance from Maori, both to continuing colonisation and to the efforts at redress of historical grievances made by the New Zealand Government, primarily through the Waitangi Tribunal. For some Maori activists for tino rangatiratanga, colonisation ‘can be seen as a part of the global process of capitalist expansionism based on the destruction of the territorial and cultural integrity of the indigenous populations by the expropriation and commodification of their lands and human resources’.4 Likewise, the group Aotearoa Educators sees international capitalist institutions such as the International Monetary Fund, the World Trade Organisation and the World Bank as representing a further wave of colonisation.5

Just as resistance took on a multiplicity of forms in the past, so too does Maori resistance to ongoing colonisation in 2009. Cultural resistance, in the form of the revitalisation of te reo Maori and tikanga Maori, begun in the 1970s, continues today. Symbolic resistance, in the form of protests, takes place around a variety of issues, most prominently in recent years the hikoi against the Foreshore and Seabed Act in 2004, which saw tens of thousands of Maori converge on parliament, many having marched the length of the North Island.6 Direct action to reclaim land also occurs with some regularity, with land occupations the most common form. In recent years, the 1995 occupation of Pakaitore in Wanganui, which lasted for 79 days, is perhaps the most prominent example, but smaller scale and less well known land occupations have occurred. April 2009 has seen an occupation in Taranaki in opposition to drilling by Greymouth Petroleum under land which includes urupa (burial grounds) and spring water still used today.7

The ongoing process of colonisation and resistance to it present a clear divide between Maori and Pakeha, a defining feature in modern New Zealand society.

Capitalism and class struggle

For many, the myth of New Zealand as a classless society held true up until the reforms of the fourth Labour government. Historian James Belich explained some of the reasoning behind this myth by noting that the living standards of working class New Zealanders were generally higher than those of working class British people in the late 19th and early 20th century. Despite this, there was little movement between the working and ruling classes in New Zealand at the time.8

In the mid 1970s and 80s, class struggle in New Zealand reached a peak not seen since the 1951 waterfront lockout. In 1977, over 200,000 workers went out on strike at some point during the year, while in 1985 over 1.2 million working days were reclaimed by striking workers.9 While the introduction of the Employment Contracts Act in 1991, legislation that severely restricted worker’s ability to strike legally, saw a significant reduction in strikes, class struggle continued in other forms.

Marx and Engels argued that the one constant throughout all societies in history was class struggle, which shaped those societies.10 For New Zealand in 2009, this still holds true. New Zealand ranks in the bottom half of OECD countries for income disparity, a worse rating than Sweden, Australia, Canada and Ireland amongst others.11 In the midst of a recession, workers are being expected to take further financial strains, both in the form of Government endorsed 9 day working fortnights (with almost a full day’s cut in pay) and in reductions in wages and conditions, simply to ensure that profit stays at a level able to keep the ruling class in the lifestyle it is accustomed to.

The 90 Day Act, which allows owners of businesses employing under 20 workers (which amounts to over 90% of work sites) to fire any worker without reason in the first 90 days of employment, is another recent example of an attack on workers rights.12 These state and corporate responses to the recession show the global resonance of predictions made by British writer Joseph Kay, who discussed a range of inevitable attacks on the working class due to the recession, both at work (in the forms of redundancies and cuts in wages and conditions) and in the community (such as evictions, foreclosures and public service cuts).13

All of the above add to pervasive class divisions in New Zealand society – divisions which are inevitable under capitalism. Constant throughout New Zealand’s history and still present in 2009, class divisions are clearly a defining characteristic in New Zealand society.

Conclusion – New Zealand, unequal and divided

As a capitalist society, based upon the colonisation of an indigenous people and the land they lived upon, New Zealand cannot be classed as anything but an unequal society. The myths of New Zealand society as a classless society with good race relations have been repeatedly proved untrue throughout history, and present day political and economic struggles against the dominant class continue this process of exploitation and resistance.

Footnotes

1: Judith Binney, ‘Te Kooti Arikirangi Te Turuki   ? – 1893′, 2007, http://www.dnzb.govt.nz/dnzb/default.asp?Find_Quick.asp?PersonEssay=1T45 (accessed 3 April 2009).

2: Rangi McGarvey, ‘Ngai Tuhoe – Self-imposed isolation – Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand’, 2008, http://www.teara.govt.nz/NewZealanders/MaoriNewZealanders/NgaiTuhoe/6/en (accessed 3 April 2009).

3: Te Miringa Hohaia, ‘Taranaki – Resistance – Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand’, 2008, http://www.teara.govt.nz/NewZealanders/MaoriNewZealanders/Taranaki/4/en (accessed 3 April 2009)

4: Teanau Tuiono, ‘Tino Rangatiratanga and capitalism’, Thrall, Issue 24, p. 3.

5: Aotearoa Educators, ‘neo-liberal globalisation and the tino rangatiratanga movement’, Thrall, Issue 18, p.3.

6: Alastair Thompson, ‘Scoop: Seabed Hikoi Reaches Parliament’, 2004, http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL0405/S00046.htm (accessed 3 April 2009).

7: Tuhi-Ao, ‘Otaraua Hapu occupation of mine reaches 17 days’, 2009, http://indymedia.org.nz/newswire/display/77066/index.php, (accessed 7 April 2009).

8: James Belich, Making Peoples: A History of the New Zealanders from Polynesian Settlement until the End of the Nineteenth Century (Honolulu : University of Hawai’i Press, 2001), p. 328-32.

9: Toby Boraman, The myth of passivity: class struggles against neoliberalism in Aotearoa in the 1990s (Dunedin: Irrecuperable Distribution, 2004), pp. 16-17.

10: Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, The Communist manifesto (New York: Signic Classic, 1998), p 1.

11: Ministry of Social Development, ‘Income inequality – Social report 2008′, 2008, http://www.socialreport.msd.govt.nz/economic-standard-living/income-inequality.html (accessed 3 April 2009).

12: Aotearoa Workers Solidarity Movement, ‘Say NO to the 90 Day Hire & Fire Act!’, Solidarity, Issue 1, February 2009, p. 3.

13: Joseph Kay, ‘What recession means for us’, 2008, http://libcom.org/library/what-recession-means-us (accessed 3 April 2009).

Bibliography

Aotearoa Educators, ‘neo-liberal globalisation and the tino rangatiratanga movement’, Thrall, Issue 18, p.3.

Aotearoa Workers Solidarity Movement, ‘Say NO to the 90 Day Hire & Fire Act!’, Solidarity, Issue 1, February 2009, p. 3.

Belich, James, Making Peoples: A History of the New Zealanders from Polynesian Settlement until the End of the Nineteenth Century (Honolulu : University of Hawai’i Press, 2001), p. 328-32.

Binney, Judith, ‘Te Kooti Arikirangi Te Turuki   ? – 1893′, 2007, http://www.dnzb.govt.nz/dnzb/default.asp?Find_Quick.asp?PersonEssay=1T45 (3 April 2009).

Boraman. Toby, The myth of passivity: class struggles against neoliberalism in Aotearoa in the 1990s (Dunedin: Irrecuperable Distribution, 2004), pp. 16-17.

Heywood, Andrew, Politics, 2nd edition (Hampshire: Palgrave MacMillan, 2002).

Heywood, Andrew, Political Ideologies: An Introduction, 3rd edition (Hampshire: Palgrave MacMillan, 2005).

Hohaia, Te Miringa, ‘Taranaki – Resistance – Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand’, 2008, http://www.teara.govt.nz/NewZealanders/MaoriNewZealanders/Taranaki/4/en (3 April 2009)

Kay, Joseph, ‘What recession means for us’, 2008, http://libcom.org/library/what-recession-means-us (3 April 2009).

Marx, Karl and Engels, Friedrich, The Communist manifesto (New York: Signic Classic, 1998), p 1.

McGarvey, Rangi, ‘Ngai Tuhoe – Self-imposed isolation – Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand’, 2008, http://www.teara.govt.nz/NewZealanders/MaoriNewZealanders/NgaiTuhoe/6/en (3 April 2009).

Ministry of Social Development, ‘Income inequality – Social report 2008′, 2008, http://www.socialreport.msd.govt.nz/economic-standard-living/income-inequality.html (3 April 2009).

Morse, Valerie, Against Freedom: The war on terrorism in everyday New Zealand life (Wellington: Rebel Press, 2007).

Mulgan, Richard, Politics In New Zealand, 3rd Edition (Auckland: Auckland University Press, 2004)

Thompson, Alastair, ‘Scoop: Seabed Hikoi Reaches Parliament’, 2004, http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL0405/S00046.htm (3 April 2009).

Tuhi-Ao, ‘Otaraua Hapu occupation of mine reaches 17 days’, 2009, http://indymedia.org.nz/newswire/display/77066/index.php, (7 April 2009).

Tuiono, Teanau, ‘Tino Rangatiratanga and capitalism’, Thrall, Issue 24, p. 3.


Say NO to the 90 Day Hire & Fire Act!

February 15, 2009

Say NO to the 90 Day Hire & Fire ActDownload flier in .pdf format (198kb)

A flier produced by AWSM against the 90 Day Hire & Fire Act brought in by the New Zealand Government in late 2008.

Flier is formatted to be printed on double sided A5.


Solidarity #1 – Free newssheet of Aotearoa Workers Solidarity Movement

February 5, 2009

The first issue of Solidarity, free monthly newssheet of the Aotearoa Workers Solidarity Movement. This issue has a special feature on water issues across Aotearoa / New Zealand. Some of the articles were written by me :)

Image

Download a .pdf of the newssheet at http://www.awsm.org.nz/solidarity/issue1.pdf or read the articles online at http://awsm.org.nz/?p=78

Contents:

* Not our crisis! Resist attacks on workers
* Water meters for Wellington?
* Profile: Auckland Water Pressure Group
* He wai Maaori – Drinking water in Parihaka
* Say NO to the 90 Day Hire & Fire Act!
* AWSM Aims & Principles


New Anarchist-Communist Organisation Launched in Aotearoa / New Zealand

December 6, 2008

A new organisation has been formed with the aim of building a revolutionary anarchist communist movement in Aotearoa/New Zealand.

The Aotearoa Workers Solidarity Movement (AWSM) is an organisation working towards a classless, stateless society: anarchist-communism. We are made up of revolutionary class-struggle anarchists from across Aotearoa / New Zealand. For now, we are a small organisation with members in Wellington, Christchurch and a few smaller towns across the country.

AWSM came together when a few anarchists saw the need for a coherent and organised group of anarchist communists, inspired by the “platformist” strand of anarchist thought. Informal chats over the last few years turned into serious planning a few months ago and a little conference at Labour weekend (late October) in Wellington.

As class struggle anarchists our priority is active involvement in workplace struggles and industrial action as well as community based campaigns in our neighbourhoods.

We aim to publish a monthly newspaper starting in 2009, and a less frequent but more in-depth theoretical magazine as well. If you think this is your kind of group and you agree with our aims and principles then please get in touch with us.

Visit us at http://www.awsm.org.nz

Aims & Principles

1: The Aotearoa Workers Solidarity Movement is an organisation working towards a classless, stateless society: anarchist-communism. We are made up of revolutionary class-struggle anarchists from across Aotearoa / New Zealand.

2: Capitalism is based on the exploitation of the working class by the ruling class. But inequality and exploitation are also expressed in terms of race, gender, sexuality, health, ability, age etc, and in these ways one section of the working class oppresses another. This divides us, causing a lack of class unity in struggle that benefits the ruling class. Oppressed groups are strengthened by autonomous action which challenges social and economic power relationships. To achieve our goal we must relinquish power over each other on a personal as well as a political level.

3: We believe that fighting all forms of oppression and exploitation is necessary. Anarchist-Communism cannot be achieved while sexism and racism still exist. In order to be effective in their struggle against their oppression both within society and within the working class, oppressed groups may at times need to organise independently. However, this should be as working class people only, as cross-class movements hide real class differences and achieve little for those in the oppressed groups. Full emancipation cannot be achieved without the abolition of capitalism.

4: We support Tino Rangatiratanga and stand in solidarity with grassroots indigenous struggle and direct action, while not supporting Maori capitalism and corporatisation (we acknowledge the lack of anarchist theory on the indigenous struggle in Aotearoa / New Zealand and are in the process of researching, debating and discussing a more detailed position on this point).

5: While trade unions can never be revolutionary, we recognise that the majority of collective workplace struggle today occurs within unions and therefore our members should join unions where they exist in their workplace, while being wary of any attempts by union bureauracrats to stifle rank and file struggle. Where unions do not exist we encourage our members to engage with their fellow workers to initiate collective action.

6: We recognise that the general strike is one of the working class’ most powerful weapons and oppose all restrictions on worker’s rights to take collective action, including strikes.

7: As well as exploiting and oppressing the majority of people worldwide, Capitalism threatens the planet through war and the destruction of the environment.

8: It is not possible to abolish Capitalism without a revolution, which will arise out of class conflict. The ruling class must be completely overthrown to achieve anarchist communism. Because the ruling class will not relinquish power without their use of armed force, this revolution will be a time of violence as well as liberation.

9: We acknowledge that by implementing the organisation section of the The Organizational Platform of the Libertarian Communists – theoretical unity, tactical unity, collective responsibility and federalism – we will be best able to move forward in promoting the aims and principles of the Aotearoa Workers Solidarity Movement.


RIP Steve Luke

November 9, 2008
Steve Luke, an Otautahi / Christchurch based anarchist, has tragically passed away. He was 52 years old.

Steve first got involved in anarchist politics and activism in the 1970s while at Massey University in Palmerston North. In more recent times, he has been a welcome presence at Otautahi / Christchurch protests and meetings, and has in the past year been involved in groups and projects like the Otautahi / Christchurch October 15th Solidarity group, the Otautahi Social Centre and the Otautahi Men’s Hui.

Steve had a car crash on Tuesday. He suffered broken ribs, collarbone, deep cut, concussion / fit, fluid on the lung and bruising. The hospital discharged him after less than 20 hours. He was at home with his cats and frequent visits from friends, but sadly and tragically he died Friday night. A friend found him Saturday morning.

Steve was a great talker…at pot lucks and parties you could easily start chatting politics with him and, before you knew it, it would be a bottle of wine and 2 hours later.

He will be sorely missed…


And they wonder why anarchists don’t care about elections…

November 3, 2008

Wow. I just sat through the leader’s debate on TV. I didn’t need any more convincing not to vote, but fucking hell, what a joke that was!

And some people wonder why anarchists are against electioneering and parliamentary politics…