Europe One significant experiment with workers' self-management took place during the
Spanish Revolution (1936–1939). In his book
Anarcho-Syndicalism (1938),
Rudolf Rocker stated: But by taking the land and the industrial plants under their own management they have taken the first and most important step on the road to Socialism. Above all, they (the Workers' and peasants self-management) have proved that the workers, even without the capitalists, are able to carry on production and to do it better than a lot of profit-hungry
entrepreneurs. After
May 1968 in France,
LIP factory, a clockwork factory based in
Besançon, became self-managed starting in 1973 after the management's decision to liquidate it. The LIP experience was an emblematic social conflict of post-1968 in France.
CFDT (the CCT as it was referred to in Northern Spain), trade-unionist
Charles Piaget led the strike in which workers claimed the
means of production. The
Unified Socialist Party (PSU) which included former
Radical Pierre Mendès-France was in favour of autogestión or self-management. In the
Basque Country of Spain, the
Mondragon Cooperative Corporation represents perhaps the longest lasting and most successful example of workers' self-management in the world. It has been touted by a diverse group of people such as the
Marxian economist Richard D. Wolff and the research book
Capital and the Debt Trap by Claudia Sanchez Bajo and Bruno Roelants as an example of how the economy can be organized on an alternative to the
capitalist mode of production. Following the
2008 financial crisis, many factories were occupied and became self-managed in Greece, France, Italy, Germany and Turkey. In Greece, solidarity-based distribution is partially the result of austerity policies' privatization of public services, which exacerbates on-the-ground solidarity activities. These have mostly emerged as a consequence of ambitious politicized thinking and mobilization, as well as a practical formulation that ensures degrees of living by transforming informal solidarity networks into remunerative distribution cooperatives. This dialectic, echoes the idea of formally managing the crisis, which reproduces itself not in spite of, but because of, official policy initiatives to combat it. Workers' collectives and cooperatives, Self-Help Groups, Local Exchange Trade Systems (LETS), Freecycle networks and Timebanks, and the first worker-occupied factory are examples of non-capitalist social experiments and innovations that have emerged in Greece since 2012.
Yugoslavia At the height of the
Cold War, Yugoslavia, as a consequence of the
Tito-Stalin split, pursued and advocated for, what was officially called,
socialist self-management in distinction from the
Eastern Bloc countries, all of which practiced
central planning and centralized management of their economies. It replaced central planning with
planning basic proportions that was supposed to stop "the chaos of social production and distribution that is innate to capitalism". It was organized according to the theories of
Josip Broz Tito and more directly
Edvard Kardelj. Yugoslav economist
Branko Horvat also made a significant contribution to the theory of workers' self-management (
radničko samoupravljanje) as practiced in Yugoslavia. Due to Yugoslavia's neutrality and its leading role in the
Non-Aligned Movement, Yugoslav companies exported to both Western and Eastern markets. Yugoslav companies carried out construction of numerous major infrastructural and industrial projects in Africa, Europe and Asia. In 1950, the Law on self-management introduced workers' councils. The "beginning of the end of bureaucracy" was declared along the pretenses of the
Marxist concept of
withering away of the state under the "Factories to the workers!" parole. According to Boris Kanzleiter, the inspiration for
workers' councils came from the People's councils – the revolutionary governing bodies of the
People's Liberation Army and the
Paris Commune. The
1953 Yugoslav Constitutional Law introduced self-management in the constitutional matter and transformed
state property into
social property. The
1963 Yugoslav Constitution, also called the Charter of Self-management, defined self-management and social property as supreme values and it defined Yugoslavia as a "socialist self-managed democratic community". The Law of Associated Labor of 1976 represented the last stage of the development of Yugoslav self-management. On the grounds of the 1974 Yugoslav constitution, it created a completely autonomous system grounded in direct sovereignty of the worker and citizen. It foresaw the formation of Basic Organizations of Associated Labor (BOAL) as the basic economic units that every worker had to be a part of based on the precise role played by that worker in the production process. It associated with other BOALs to form an Organization of Associated Labour (OAL) that could, with other OALs form Complex Organizations of Associated Labor. The assembly that consisted of all the workers' of a BOAL elected a delegate, which was bound with an imperative mandate, into the workers' council of the OAL that decided on all matters: from electing the director, to decisions on salaries, investments, association, development and specific production goals. Another feature of Yugoslav self-management were Self-management agreements and Social compacts, these replaced classical contracts. The goal of OALs was not
for-profit but a social goal – it was supposed to facilitate education, healthcare, employment and resolving the housing issue. Macro-economic reforms and structural adjustment programs that were imposed by the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the
World Bank brought an end to workers' self-management in Yugoslavia.
Empresas recuperadas movement in Buenos Aires, occupied and self-managed since 2003 English-language discussions of this phenomenon may employ several different translations of the original Spanish expression other than
recovered factory. For example, worker-recuperated enterprise, recuperated/recovered factory/business/company, worker-recovered factory/business, worker-recuperated/recovered company, worker-reclaimed factory, and worker-run factory have been noted. The phenomenon is also known as autogestión. The movement emerged as a response to the years of crisis leading up to and including Argentina's 2001 economic crisis. By 2001–2002, around 200 Argentine companies were recuperated by their workers and turned into worker
co-operatives. Prominent examples include the
Brukman factory, the
Hotel Bauen and
FaSinPat (formerly known as Zanon). As of 2020, around 16,000 Argentine workers run close to 400 recuperated factories. The proliferation of these "recuperations" has led to the formation of a recuperated factory movement which has ties to a diverse political network including
socialists,
Peronists,
anarchists and
communists. Organizationally, this includes two major federations of recovered factories, the larger Movimiento Nacional de Empresas Recuperadas (National Movement of Recuperated Businesses, or MNER) on the left and the smaller National Movement of Recuperated Factories (MNFR) on the right. The movement led in 2011 to a new
bankruptcy law that facilitates take over by the workers. The legislation was signed into law by President
Cristina Kirchner on June 29, 2011. == See also ==