Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
It is based on libertarian municipalism, confederalism, and social ecology.
This theory promote libertarian municipalism and green technology.
Post scarcity anarchism, an economic system based on social ecology, libertarian municipalism, and an abundance of fundamental resources.
Communalists believe that libertarian municipalism is both the means to achieve a rational society and structure of that society.
She has also authored numerous articles about or related to Bookchin's thought, especially libertarian municipalism, social ecology and eco-feminism.
Libertarian municipalism intends to create a situation in which the two powers - the municipal confederations and the nation-state - cannot coexist.
Bookchin tied libertarian municipalism to a utopian vision for decentralizing cities into small, human scaled eco-communities, and to a concept of urban revolution.
Libertarian socialists generally place their hopes in decentralized means of direct democracy such as libertarian municipalism, citizens' assemblies, trade unions and workers' councils.
This concept is related to the theory of communist anarchism, social ecology and libertarian municipalism, autonomist marxism and participatory economics.
Libertarian municipalism is a political program developed by libertarian socialist theorist Murray Bookchin, to create democratic citizens' assemblies in towns and urban neighborhoods.
The Politics of Social Ecology: Libertarian Municipalism (1997) Montreal: Black Rose Books.
His writings on libertarian municipalism, a theory of face-to-face, assembly democracy, had an influence on the Green movement and anti-capitalist direct action groups such as Reclaim the Streets.
In 1980 Bookchin used the term "libertarian municipalism", to describe a system in which libertarian institutions of directly democratic assemblies would oppose and replace the state with a confederation of free municipalities.
In practice his agenda takes the form of a combination of elements of anarchist communism with a support for local-government and NGO initiatives which he refers to as Libertarian Municipalism.
This primary method used to achieve this is called libertarian municipalism which involves the establishment of face-to-face democratic institutions which are to grow and expand confederally with the goal of eventually replacing the nation-state.
In From Urbanization to Cities (originally published in 1987 as The Rise of Urbanization and the Decline of Citizenship), Bookchin traced the democratic traditions that influenced his political philosophy and defined the implementation of the libertarian municipalism concept.
As such "Whereas the syndicalist alternative re-privatizes the economy into "self-managed" collectives and opens the way to their degeneration into traditional forms of private property - whether "collectively" owned or not - libertarian municipalism politicizes the economy and dissolves it into the civic domain.
Libertarian municipalism is seen not merely as an effort to "take over" city and municipal councils to construct a more "environmentally friendly" government, but rather an effort to transform and democratize these structures, to root them in popular assemblies and to knit them together along confederal lines to appropriate a regional economy.
While Bookchin long placed libertarian municipalism within the framework of political Anarchism, in the late 1990s he broke with anarchism and in his final essay, The Communalist Project (2003), identified libertarian municipalism as the main component of Communalism.