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    Not to be confused with the fictional Communalism.


    Bookchin Communalism is a far left, Libertarian Socialist, socially progressive, and sometimes Anarchist ideology with an extreme emphasis on Environmentalism, based on the political, philosophical, and sociological ideas of Murray Bookchin.

    Bookchin Communalism believes in a stateless, classless, society where hierarchy is reduced as much as possible and is organized into eco-communes that participate in federalism, most private property being made communal.

    History

    Murray Bookchin was born to Jewish immigrants and from a very young age was heavily influenced by his File:Soc.png Socialist Grandmother. This led him to be involved with the   Young Communist League USA and hold what he would later describe as   Stalinist views. However, after studying more   Marxist literature in his late teens he would shift to a   Trotskyist perspective. He became a factory worker and unionizer through the 1940's and over that period of time his belief in   Marxism-Leninism in general began to wane, moving towards a more general Marxist position.

    He began taking inspiration from more   Anarchist writers like Peter Kroprotkin, particularly liking their views on hierarchy, seeing it as more wholistic than contemporary Marxists. From here he developed his idea of post-scarcity, which he intertwined with his strong views in the growing   Environmentalist movement. This would culminate in his book Post-Scarcity Anarchism (1971), in which he would outline these beliefs. His concept of Social Ecology, that the ecological crisis is actually a social crisis, would become one of the prominent focuses of his work premiering in his most well known work, The Ecology of Freedom (1982). In which he laid out that socially dominating societal structures (specifically the   State and   Capitalism) lead to a society which dominates and destroys nature, instead he proposed society be organized into federations/confederations of ecological,   Directly Democratic, communes. This would later become known as Communalism. He thought the best way to achieve this society was to organize communities into revolutionary, confederated, municipalities that would adhere to Communalist principles; this is known as Libertarian Municipalism.

    Bookchin would begin his break with   Anarchism with his 1995 work Social Anarchism or Lifestyle Anarchism in which he harshly criticized what he called   Lifestyle Anarchism. This break would be cemented in 2002 with The Communalist Project, in which he declared Communalism a unique revolutionary tradition that is distinct from, but takes the best parts of, Marxism and Anarchism. Although not all adherents of Communalism consider it separate from Anarchism and as such consider themselves Anarchists. In 2004, Bookchin had brief correspondence with Abdullah Öcalan, an imprisoned Kurdish revolutionary leader and student of Bookchin, who went on to formulate   Democratic Confederalism as a practical application of Communalism in Kurdistan. However, Bookchin could not communicate much with Öcalan because of a mix of his declining health and Öcalan's solitary confinement, dying in 2006.

    Variants

      French Municipalism

    The French Municipalism is a political movement portrayed by the "Mouvement Municipal" / Municipalist Movement. Founded by three former   Integral Nationalism believers, they chose to embrace the   Anarchist ideology, as they thought until this moment that a decentralized royalism was the only way to let communes or municipalities exist (then they learnt about Left Anarchism).

    As the movement is composed of many former right-wing and far-right militants, alongside left-wing and far-left socialists, the Mouvement Municipal's founders believe in the possibility of an union between   Anarcho-Communism and   Anarcho-Conservatism communes, solving the populist issue of the left-right scheme. People would be free to associate with   Culturally Right or   Culturally Left communes, as long as no essentialist discriminations are made. No matter the culture preference, the economy has to stay Communist and the confederalized communes have to respect the main constitution, even on the cultural laws.

    How to Draw

    The Communalism design is based on the "Libertarian Ecosocialist flag" by u/TheIenzo. It is simply a mirrored   anarcho-communist flag with a leaf across the center.

     
    Flag of Libertarian Municipalism
    1. Draw a ball.
    2. Draw a thin leaf shape cutting across the ball from the stem at bottom right, to the tip at top left,
    3. Colour the left half of the leaf a lighter shade of green (#44AA00), and the right half, a darker shade of green (#008000).
    4. Colour the area below the leaf black (#141414), but not pure black.
    5. Colour the area above the leaf red (#D40E00).
    6. Add the eyes and congratulations, you have drawn Communalism!
    Color Name HEX RGB
    Light Green #44AA00 68, 170, 0
    Dark Green #008000 0, 128, 0
    Black #141414 20, 20, 20
    Red #D40A00 212, 10, 0


    Relationships

    Friendly

    Mixed

    •   Marxism–Leninism - Overly economistic and authoritarian.
    •   Environmentalism - I'm an ecologist, not an environmentalist! Environmentalism is liberal and rejects social ecology.
    •   Marxism - Good analysis, though kind of outdated.

    Negative

    Further Information

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    Template:Libertarian es:Comunalismo Bookchin pt-br:Comunalismo de Bookchin


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  • Blubson • 16 minutes ago
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