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version of Section I.
Section I - What would an anarchist society look like?
So far this FAQ has been largely critical, focusing on hierarchy, capitalism,
the state and so on, and the problems to which they have led, as well
as refuting some bogus "solutions" that have been offered by
authoritarians of both the right and the left. It is now time to examine
the constructive side of anarchism -- the libertarian-socialist society
that anarchists envision. This is important because anarchism is essentially
a constructive theory, in stark contradiction to the picture
of usually painted of anarchism as chaos or mindless destruction.
Therefore, in this section of the FAQ we will give a short outline
of what an anarchist society might look like. Such a society has basic
features -- such as being non-hierarchical, decentralised and, above
all else, spontaneous like life itself. To quote Glenn Albrecht, anarchists
"lay great stress on the free unfolding of a spontaneous order
without the use of external force or authority." ["Ethics,
Anarchy and Sustainable Development", Anarchist Studies,
vol.2, no.2, p. 110] This type of development implies that anarchist
society would be organised from the simple to the complex, from the
individual upwards to the community, the bio-region and, ultimately,
the planet. The resulting complex and diverse order, which would be
the outcome of nature freely unfolding toward greater diversity and
complexity, is ethically preferable to any other sort of order simply
because it allows for the highest degree of organic solidarity and
freedom. Kropotkin described this vision of a truly free society as
follows:
"We foresee millions and millions of groups freely constituting themselves
for the satisfaction of all the varied needs of human beings. . . All
these will be composed of human beings who will combine freely. . .
'Take pebbles,' said Fourier, 'put them in a box and shake them, and
they will arrange themselves in a mosaic that you could never get by
instructing to anyone the work of arranging them harmoniously.'"
[The Place of Anarchism in Socialistic Evolution, pp. 11-12]
Anarchist opposition to hierarchy is an essential part of a "spontaneously
ordered" society, for authority stops the free development and
growth of the individual. From this natural growth of individuals,
groups and society as a whole anarchists expect a society which meets
the needs of all (both for material goods and individual and social
freedom). In Proudhon's words, "liberty is the mother of order,
not its daughter." Any attempt to force society or individuals
into a pre-determined structure which restricts their liberty will
produce dis-order as natural balances and development is hindered
and distorted in anti-social and destructive directions. Thus an anarchist
society must be a free society of free individuals, associating within
libertarian structures, rather than a series of competing hierarchies
(be they political or economical). Only in freedom can society and
individuals develop and create a just and fair society.
As the individual does not exist in a social vacuum, appropriate
social conditions are required for individual freedom (and so subjectivity,
or thought) to develop and blossom according to its full potential.
The theory of anarchism is built around the central assertion that
individuals and their organisations cannot be considered in
isolation from each other. As Carole Pateman points out, there is
"the argument that there is an interrelationship between the authority
structures of institutions and the psychological qualities and attitudes
of individuals, and . . . the related argument that the major function
of participation is an educative one." [Participation and Democratic
Theory, p. 27] Anarchism presents these arguments in their most
coherent and libertarian form. In other words, freedom is only sustained
and protected by activity under conditions of freedom, namely self-government.
Freedom is the only precondition for acquiring the maturity required
for continued freedom.
As individual freedom can only be created, developed and defended
by self-government and free association, a system which encourages
individuality must be decentralised and participatory in order for
people to develop a psychology that allows them to accept the responsibilities
of self-management. Living under capitalism or any other authoritarian
system produces a servile character, as the individual is constantly
placed under hierarchical authority, which blunts their critical and
self-governing abilities by lack of use. Such a situation cannot promote
freedom. Looking at capitalism, we find that under wage labour, people
sell their creative energy and control over their activity for a given
period. The boss does not just take surplus value from the time employees
sell, but the time itself -- their ability to make their own decisions,
express themselves through work and with their fellow workers. Wage
labour equals wage slavery. You sell your time and skills (i.e. liberty)
everyday at work to someone else. You will never be able to buy that
time back for yourself. Once it is gone; it is gone for good. This
is why anarchists see the need to "create the situation where each
person may live by working freely, without being forced to sell his
[or her] work and his [or her] liberty to others who accumulate wealth
by the labour of their serfs." [Kropotkin, Words of a Rebel,
p. 208]
Anarchism is about changing society and abolishing all forms of
authoritarian social relationship, putting life before the soul-destroying
"efficiency" needed to survive under capitalism; for the anarchist
"takes his stand on his positive right to life and all its pleasures,
both intellectual, moral and physical. He loves life, and intends
to enjoy it to the full." [Michael Bakunin, quoted by Brian Morris,
Bakunin: The Philosophy of Freedom, p. 118]
Anarchists think that the essential social values are human values,
and that society is a complex of associations held together by the
wills of their members, whose well-being is its purpose. They consider
that it is not enough that the forms of association should have the
passive or "implied" consent of their members, but that the
society and the individuals who make it up will be healthy only if
it is in the full sense libertarian, i.e. self-governing, self-managed,
and egalitarian. This implies not only that all the members should
have a "right" to influence its policy if they so desire, but
that the greatest possible opportunity should be afforded for every
person to exercise this right. Anarchism involves an active, not merely
passive, citizenship on the part of society's members and holds that
this principle is not only applied to some "special" sphere
of social action called "politics" but to any and every form
of social action, including economic activity.
So, as will be seen, the key concept underlying both the social/political
and the economic structure of libertarian socialism is "self-management,"
a term that implies not only workers control of their workplaces but
also citizens' control of their communities (where it becomes "self-government"),
through direct democracy and voluntary federation. Thus self-management
is the positive implication of anarchism's "negative" principle
of opposition to hierarchical authority. For through self-management,
hierarchical authority is dissolved as self-managing workplace and
community assemblies/councils are decentralised, "horizontal"
organisations in which each participant has an equal voice in the
decisions that affect his or her life, instead of merely following
orders and being governed by others. Self-management, therefore, is
the essential condition for a world in which individuals will be free
to follow their own dreams, in their own ways, co-operating together
as equals without interference from any form of authoritarian power
(such as government or boss).
Perhaps needless to say, this section is intended as a heuristic
device only, as a way of helping readers envision how anarchist
principles might be embodied in practice. They are not (nor are they
intended to be, nor are they desired to be) a definitive statement
of how they must be embodied. The idea that a few people could
determine exactly what a free society would look like is contrary
to the anarchist principles of free growth and thought, and is far
from our intention. Here we simply try to indicate some of the structures
that an anarchist society may contain, based on the what ideals and
ideas anarchists hold and the few examples of anarchy in action that
have existed and our critical evaluation of their limitations and
successes.
Of course, an anarchist society will not be created overnight nor
without links to the past, and so it will initially include structures
created in social struggle (i.e. created within but against
capitalism and the state -- see section J.5)
and will be marked with the ideas that inspired and developed within
that struggle. For example, the anarchist collectives in Spain were
organised in a bottom-up manner, similar to the way the C.N.T. (the
anarcho-syndicalist labour union) was organised before the revolution.
In this sense, anarchy is not some distant goal but rather an expression
of working class struggle. The creation of alternatives to the current
hierarchical, oppressive, exploitative and alienated society is a
necessary part of the class struggle and the maintaining of your liberty
and humanity in the insane world of hierarchical society. As such,
an anarchist society will be the generalisation of the various types
of "anarchy in action" created in the various struggles
against all forms of oppression and exploitation (see section
I.2.3).
This means that how an anarchist society would look like and work
is not independent of the means used to create it. In other words,
an anarchist society will reflect the social struggle which preceded
it and the ideas which existed within that struggle as modified by
the practical needs of any given situation. Therefore the vision of
a free society indicated in this section of the FAQ is not some sort
of abstraction which will be created overnight. If anarchists did
think that then we would rightly be called utopian. No, an anarchist
society is the outcome of activity and social struggle, struggle which
helps to create a mass movement which contains individuals who can
think for themselves and are willing and able to take responsibility
for their own lives (see section J - "What
do anarchists do?").
So, when reading this section please remember that this is not a
blueprint but only one possible suggestion of what anarchy would look
like. It is designed to provoke thought and indicate that an anarchist
society is possible and that such a society is the product of our
activity in the here and now. We hope that our arguments and ideas
presented in this section will inspire more debate and discussion
of how a free society could work and, equally as important, help to
inspire the struggle that will create that society. After all, anarchists
desire to build the new world in the shell of the old. Unless we have
some idea of what that new society will be like it is difficult to
pre-figure it in our activities today! A point not lost on Kropotkin
who argued that it is difficult to "build" "without extremely
careful consideration beforehand, based on the study of social life,
of what and how we want to build -- we must reject [Proudhon's]
slogan [that "in demolishing we shall build"] . . . and declare:
'in building we shall demolish.'" [Conquest of Bread, p.
173f] More recently, Noam Chomsky argued that "[a]lternatives to
existing forms of hierarchy, domination, private power and social
control certainly exist in principle. . . But to make them realistic
will require a great deal of committed work, including the work of
articulating them clearly." [Noam Chomsky, Turning the Tide,
p. 250] This section of the FAQ can be considered as a contribution
to the articulating of libertarian alternatives to existing society,
of want we want to build for the future.
In other words, view this section of our FAQ as a guide. To use
an analogy, when going on holiday it is a good idea to have a map
or guidebook with you, otherwise you will not know where you are going
and, indeed, will likely end up in the wrong place. Thus the
progress towards a free society is helped by anarchist ideas and visions,
otherwise it may end up the opposite of what we desire. However, it
us important that any such guide be discussed by everyone before hand,
to ensure that it is a useful guide and one that reflects everyone's
interests and desires. Thus this section of our FAQ is simply a contribution
to this discussion, a contribution inspired (in part) by previous
contributions, visions and struggles.
We are not afraid that many will argue that much of the vision we
present in this section of the FAQ is utopian. Perhaps they are right,
but, as Oscar Wilde once said:
"A map of the world that does not include Utopia is not worth glancing at,
for it leaves out the one country at which Humanity is always landing. And
when Humanity lands there, it looks out and, seeing a better country, sets
sail. Progress is the realisation of Utopias." [The Soul of Man Under
Socialism, p. 1184]
However, we have attempted to be a practical as we are visionary,
presenting realistic problems as well as presenting evidence for our
solutions to these problems (as well as our general ideas) from real
life where possible, rather than present a series of impossible assumptions
which dismiss possible problems by definition. After all, it is better
to consider the worse possible cases for if they do not appear then
nothing has been lost and if they do at least we have a starting point
for possible solutions. So, all in all, we have tried to be practical
utopians!
We must stress, however, that anarchists do not want a "perfect"
society (as is often associated with the term "utopia"). This
would be as impossible as the neo-classical vision of perfect competition.
Rather we want a free society and so one based on real human beings
and so one with its own problems and difficulties. Our use of the
word "utopia" should not be taken to imply that anarchists
assume away all problems and argue that an anarchist society would
be ideal and perfect. No society has ever been perfect and no society
ever will be. All we argue is that an anarchist society will have
fewer problems than those before and be better to live within. Anyone
looking for perfection should look elsewhere. Anyone looking for a
better, but still human, world may find in anarchism a potential end
for their quest.
One last point. We must point out here that we are discussing the
social and economic structures of areas within which the inhabitants
are predominately anarchists. It is obviously the case that areas
in which the inhabitants are not anarchists will take on different
forms depending upon the ideas that dominate there. Hence, assuming
the end of the current state structure, we could see anarchist communities
along with statist ones (capitalist or socialist) and these communities
taking different forms depending on what their inhabitants want --
communist to individualist communities in the case of anarchist ones,
state socialist to private state communities in the statist areas,
ones based on religious sects and so on. As Malatesta argued, anarchists
"must be intransigent in our opposition to all capitalist imposition
and exploitation, and tolerant of all social concepts which prevail
in different human groupings, so long as they do not threaten the
equal rights and freedom of others." [Life and Ideas, p.
174] Thus we respect the wishes of others to experiment and live their
own lives as they see fit, while encouraging those in capitalist and
other statist communities to rise in revolution against their masters
and join the free federation of communes of the anarchist community.
Needless to say, we do not discuss non-anarchist communities here
as it is up to non-anarchists to present their arguments in favour
of their kind of statism. We will concentrate on discussing anarchist
ideas on social organisation here.
So, remember that we are not arguing that everyone will live in
an anarchist way in a free society. Far from it. There will be pockets
of unfreedom around, simply because the development of ideas varies
from area to area. However, it would be a mistake to assume that just
because there are many choices of community available that it automatically
makes a society an anarchist one. For example, the modern world boasts
over 200 different states. For most of them, individuals can leave
and join another if it will let them. There is no world government
as such. This does not make this series of states an anarchy. Similarly,
a system of different company towns is not an anarchy either. The
nature of the associations is just as important as their voluntary
nature. As Kropotkin argued, the "communes of the next revolution
will not only break down the state and substitute free federation
for parliamentary rule; they will part with parliamentary rule within
the commune itself . . . They will be anarchist within the commune
as they will be anarchist outside it." [The Commune of Paris]
Hence an anarchist society is one that is freely joined and left and
is internally non-hierarchical. Thus anarchist communities may co-exist
with non-anarchist ones but this does not mean the non-anarchist
ones are in any way anarchistic or libertarian.
When reading this section of the FAQ remember three things. One,
an anarchist society will be created by the autonomous actions of
the mass of the population, not by anarchists writing books about
it. This means a real anarchist society will make many mistakes and
develop in ways we cannot predict. Two, that it is only a series of
suggestions on how things could work in an anarchist society
-- it is not a blueprint of any kind. Three, that we recognise
that anarchist areas will probably co-exist with non-anarchist areas.
This does not make the non-anarchist areas anarchist and it is up
to supporters of hierarchy to present their own visions of the future.
All anarchists can do is present what we believe and why we think
such a vision is both desirable and viable.
We hope that our arguments and ideas presented in this section of
the FAQ will inspire more debate and discussion of how a free society
would work. In addition, and equally as important, we hope it will
help inspire the struggle that will create that society. After all,
anarchists desire to build the new world in the shell of the old.
Unless we have some idea of what that new society will be like it
is difficult to create it in our activities in the here and now!
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