331,274 research outputs found
Defend China! Boycott Japanese Goods
Political flyer in support of boycott of Japan. Reproduces editorial originally published in the September 25, 1937 issue of the Socialist Call newspaper with headline: In Defence of China. Student Publications: The Campus Newspaper Collectio
Workers of the world, unite!: Declaration on the dissolution of the Communist International, adopted May 27, 1943.
https://stars.library.ucf.edu/prism/1520/thumbnail.jp
Vote for socialism in 1956
https://stars.library.ucf.edu/prism/1083/thumbnail.jp
Stalinist international anarchism: A condemnation of Stalinist international brigandage and forcible annexation of territory in the light of Marxian fundamentals.
https://stars.library.ucf.edu/prism/1596/thumbnail.jp
What is socialism?: Answering questions most frequently asked
https://stars.library.ucf.edu/prism/1052/thumbnail.jp
Sailing in troubled waters : drinking water provision in Timisoara ; paper for the conference 'Alltag der Globalisierung. Perspektiven einer transnationalen Anthropologie', January 16-18, 2003, Institute of Cultural Anthropology and European Ethnology, Johann Wolfgang Goethe University, Frankfurt am Main
After more than a decade of post-socialist transition, transition theories are increasingly criticised for their inability to grasp the new post-socialist reality. However, even in the light of political, economic, social and cultural restructuring processes taking place on a global scale, the structural legacies of socialist and pre-socialist development are not erased. On the contrary, they continue to play an important role by filtering the impact of global tendencies upon post-socialist societies. With reference to a case study from the Romanian city of Timisoara I will address in the following the ambivalencies connected to the efforts of local elites in the process of implementing global-level requirements in a post-socialist environment
James Connolly\u27s Years in America, 1902-1910
James Connolly, born in Edinburgh, Scotland in 1868, was an Irish socialist who would go on to be a leading member of the 1916 Easter Rebellion in Ireland. From an early age he became involved in the socialist movement through groups such as the Scottish Socialist Federation and the Independent Labor Party. A self-educated man well read in the socialist and political literature of his day, Connolly eventually made his way back to Ireland, forming his own socialist group, the Irish Socialist Republican Party. In 1902 he embarked on a speaking tour in the United States at the invite of Daniel De Leon’s Socialist Labor Party. Upon return to Ireland, troubles arose within his party, resulting in his expulsion and subsequent return to America, where he would live from 1903 to 1910. Connolly’s years in America had a profound impact on his political and socialist ideology, providing him with real world experience navigating leadership politics, and refining his grassroots labor organization and strike methods. He wrote and traveled extensively with the SLP, IWW, and SP, thus gaining valuable experience he would bring back to Ireland and employ for the causes of the Irish worker, and of Irish national independence. He had arrived in America as a socialist speaker and writer from a minor party, but then returned to Ireland as a veteran strike leader and labor organizer, with revolutionary aims for Ireland and a far more defined understanding of his own socialist ideology
Socialist freedom or capitalist serfdom?: Peace and plenty or war and want? : manifesto of the Socialist Labor Party of America, September 1945
https://stars.library.ucf.edu/prism/1267/thumbnail.jp
The Democratic Socialist, Vol. 1, No.3, Jan - Feb. 1984
Discussion journal of the D.S.P (Democratic Socialist Party)
Articles include \u27\u27The Workers Party in Perspective\u27\u27 by Philip O\u27Conno
Why Strike?
Political flyer in support of the April 22, 1936 student strike. Student Publications: The Campus Newspaper Collectio
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