fbpx
Wikipedia

General strike

A general strike is a strike action in which participants cease all economic activity, such as working, to strengthen the bargaining position of a trade union or achieve a common social or political goal. They are organised by large coalitions of political, social, and labour organizations and may also include rallies, marches, boycotts, civil disobedience, non-payment of taxes, and other forms of direct or indirect action. Additionally, general strikes might exclude care workers, such as teachers, doctors, and nurses.

Historically, the term general strike has referred primarily to solidarity action, which is a multi-sector strike that is organised by trade unions who strike together in order to force pressure on employers to begin negotiations or offer more favourable terms to the strikers; though not all strikers may have a material interest in each other's negotiations, they all have a material interest in maintaining and strengthening the collective efficacy of strikes as a bargaining tool.

History edit

Precursors edit

 
Constantin François de Chassebœuf, whose early conception of the general strike lay the groundwork for its systematic formulation in the 19th century

An early predecessor of the general strike were the Jewish traditions of the Sabbatical and Jubilee years, the latter of which involves widespread debt relief and land redistribution.[1] The secessio plebis, during the times of the Roman Republic, has also been noted as a precursor to the general strike.[2]

Early conceptions of the general strike were proposed during the Renaissance by Étienne de La Boétie,[2] and during the Age of Enlightenment by Jean Meslier and Honoré Gabriel Riqueti.[3] With the outbreak of the French Revolution, the idea was taken up by radicals such as Jean-Paul Marat, Sylvain Maréchal and Constantin François de Chassebœuf, who proposed a strike that included merchants and industrialists alongside industrial workers and farmworkers.[4] In his essay Les Ruines, Chassebœuf proposed a general strike by "every profession useful to society" against the "civil, military, or religious agents of government", contrasting "the People" against the "men who do nothing".[5] Chassebœuf's work held a great influence in Great Britain, where it was distributed throughout the country by the London Corresponding Society, while his chapter on the general strike was reprinted for decades after its initial publication.[6] The idea was later taken up by the British economist Thomas Attwood and the French communist Louis Auguste Blanqui.[2]

During the early years of the Industrial Revolution, an ill-defined conception of a general strike was expressed by workers in Nottingham and Manchester, but it lacked a systematic formulation.[7] There were periodical strikes throughout the early 19th century that could loosely be considered as 'general strikes'. In the United States, the 1835 Philadelphia General Strike lasted for three weeks, after which the striking workers won their goal of a ten-hour workday and an increase in wages.[8]

Conception edit

 
William Benbow pictured in Punch in 1848

The idea of the general strike was first formulated by William Benbow,[9] a Quaker and shoemaker that became involved in the British radical movement of the early 19th century.[10] After he was arrested for his political activities, Benbow turned away from reformism and began to publish a number of anti-authoritarian and anti-clerical polemics.[11] At meetings of the National Union of the Working Classes, Benbow expressed impatience with the progress of the Reform Bill and called for armed resistance against the government.[12]

In January 1832, Benbow published a pamphlet titled Grand National Holiday and Congress of the Productive Classes, in which outlined his proposals for a general strike.[13] Benbow called for workers themselves to declare a month-long "holiday",[14] which would be financially supported first by workers' savings and then by exacting "contributions" from the wealthy. He also proposed the formation of workers' councils to keep the peace, distribute food and elect delegates to a congress, which would itself carry out wide-reaching societal reforms.[13] Months after the pamphlet's publication, Benbow was arrested for leading a 100,000-strong demonstration, which he had intended as a "dress rehearsal" for his proposed "national holiday".[15]

The passage of the Reform Act brought with it the collapse of the radical movement, including Benbow's National Union. But six years later, in an atmosphere of rising disillusionment with the progress of political reform, the nascent Chartist movement adopted Benbow's platform for a "national holiday".[16] The Chartists planned to carry out their month-long national holiday in August 1839, but following Benbow's arrest, the campaign was abandoned.[17] Benbow was tried and found guilty of sedition. Although he attempted to continue his Chartist activities from prison, after being excommunicated from the movement by Feargus O'Connor, Benbow ceased his political activities.[18]

Early expressions edit

 
Statue commemorating the 1842 general strike

In April 1842, after the second Chartist Petition was rejected by the British Parliament, demands for fairer wages and conditions across many different industries finally exploded into the first general strike in a capitalist country.[19] The strike began in the coal mines of Staffordshire and soon spread throughout Britain, affecting factories, mills and mines from Scotland to South Wales.[20] Although the general strike started as an apolitical demand for better working conditions, by August 1842, it became directly associated with the Chartists and took on a revolutionary character. But government forces intervened, cracking down on the protests and arresting its leaders, eventually forcing a return to work.[21]

Strike actions by workers in Barcelona played a prominent role in the Spanish Revolution of 1854, which gave way to a progressive period that extended a number of civil liberties to Spanish workers.[22] But labour unrest grew as the new authorities again prohibited freedom of association and work stoppages, leading to the outbreak of the 1855 Catalan general strike, the first in Spanish history.[23] After months of strike action and attempted negotitations, the general strike was suppressed and the draft constitution suspended in a coup by Leopoldo O'Donnell.[24]

During the American Civil War, millions of black slaves escaped southern plantations and fled to Union territory, depriving the Confederacy of its main source of labour in what W. E. B. Du Bois described as a "general strike" in his book Black Reconstruction in America.[25][26] However, this conception were rebuffed by African-American economist Abram Lincoln Harris, who dismissed Du Bois' claims of a general strike as fantastical.[27] A. A. Taylor also rejected Du Bois' interpretation, noting that the flight from the plantations did not constitute an organised movement to achieve economic or political concessions.[28] And American historian Arthur Charles Cole criticised what he described as "discrepancies between well established facts and extravagant generalization" in Du Bois' claims of a general strike.[29]

Debate in the First International edit

 
Mikhail Bakunin, leader of the anti-authoritarian faction of First International, which advocated for a revolutionary general strike to overthrow the state and capitalism

In 1864, the International Workingmen's Association (IWA) was established as a federation of trade unions by delegates from England and France.[30] The French trade union delegates, such as Eugene Varlin, saw the nascent International as a means to coordinate support for strike actions by its members.[31] In the first volume of Das Kapital, published in 1867, Karl Marx conceived of the general strike as a means by which to build class consciousness.[32]

At the International's Brussels Congress of 1868, the Belgian delegate César De Paepe proposed that a general strike could be used to prevent the outbreak of war, which he considered to be a means for the ruling class to subordinate working people. He further declared that trade unions themselves constituted the mechanism for replacing capitalism with socialism, the establishment of which would put a final end to all wars.[33] In a letter to Friedrich Engels, Marx himself rejected what he described as "the Belgian nonsense that it was necessary to strike against war".[34] When Mikhail Bakunin joined the International the following year, he declared his own support for these proposals.[35] Bakunin rejected political participation, instead advocating for workers to take strike actions to improve their working conditions.[36] He argued that the International could be the organisation through which trade unions could build such strike actions into a revolutionary general strike, which would abolish capitalism and institute socialism.[37]

The proposals for a revolutionary general strike to overthrow the state were rejected by the Marxist faction,[38] who instead proposed the creation of political parties to take state power.[39] Through the General Council, which had centralised control over the International,[40] Marx moved to expel Bakunin's anti-authoritarian faction at the Hague Congress of 1872.[41] In response, the expelled sections established the Anti-Authoritarian International, which was designed to operate according to a federal structure.[42] The anti-authoritarians upheld the syndicalist view of using the International as a coordinating body to support strike actions and build them towards a revolutionary general strike, which would overthrow the state and establish workers' control over the means of production.[43] This view was particularly supported by the Spanish Regional Federation, which itself organised a general strike in Alcoy, although it was quickly put down by Spanish government forces.[44]

At the Geneva Congress of 1873, Belgian delegates proposed the adoption of the general strike as a tactic for social revolution.[45] This motion was supported by the Jura Federation, which additionally stressed the need for smaller strikes as a means to achieve wage increases.[46] The discussions over strike action at the Geneva Congress lay the foundations for what was to become known as anarcho-syndicalism.[47] But before long, the anti-authoritarians began to move away from the anarcho-syndicalist model. Members of the Belgian section began to advocate for a dictatorship of the proletariat and electoralism, while the French and Italian sections moved towards anarcho-communism and proposed the theory of propaganda of the deed.[48] By 1880, the debates within the International had led to its collapse.[49]

Rise of revolutionary syndicalism edit

 
Engraving depicting the Haymarket affair of 1886

In 1881, a revolutionary socialist faction of the Socialist Labor Party of America (SLPA) split off and established the International Working People's Association (IWPA), which developed anarchist tendencies and held itself to be a continuation of the defunct IWA.[50] Inspired by the example of the Paris Commune, IWPA members such as the Chicago anarchist Albert Parsons formulated a kind of revolutionary syndicalism that eschewed the general strike in favour of popular insurrection.[51] In response to the repression of the Great Railroad Strike of 1877, the IWPA armed and drilled its members into workers' militias, seeing violent action as a necessary compliment to strike action.[52] On 1 May 1886, the IWPA organised a nationwide general strike for the eight-hour day, which had been a focus of demands for Parsons and the Chicago anarchists.[53] Throughout the United States, hundreds of thousands of workers went on strike.[52] The general strike's epicenter was in Chicago, where protests against the police repression of striking workers escalated into a riot.[54] Eight of the protest's organisers, including Parsons, were executed by hanging on charges of conspiracy. In the wake of their execution, the IWPA demand for the eight-hour day spread around the world and 1 May was declared International Workers' Day.[55]

Inspired by the IWPA's general strike, European anarchists began to reconsider the general strike as a revolutionary instrument, with the French anarchist Joseph Tortelier taking up the idea of the revolutionary general strike, which then spread to Italian and Spanish anarchists. Albert Parsons' wife Lucy Parsons also adopted the revolutionary general strike in her own platform, which became a founding precept of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW).[56] The first trade union to adopt the revolutionary general strike into its platform was the French General Confederation of Labour (CGT).[57] The CGT launched its own campaign for workers themselves to institute the eight-hour day, culminating in a general strike which secured French workers a reduction in working time and workload, an increase in wages and the introduction of the weekend.[58]

The CGT's example accelerated the spread of revolutionary syndicalism throughout the world,[59] bringing with it a wave of general strikes at the turn of the 20th century, to mixed results.[60] Although the Belgian general strike of 1893 was halted in order to prevent damage to the workers' movement, it eventually won its demand of universal manhood suffrage.[60] Following the Cuban War of Independence, in 1902, anarcho-syndicalists organised the country's first general strike against the government of the new Republic of Cuba.[61] In the Netherlands, the railroad strikes of 1903 resulted in harsh repression against the Dutch workers' movement.[60] The Swedish general strike of 1909 was broken up without achieving its demands,[62] accelerating the split of syndicalists from the social-democratic unions and the formation of the Central Organisation of the Workers of Sweden (SAC).[63]

 
The 1905 general strike in Tampere, Grand Duchy of Finland

Some of the general strikes of this period reached revolutionary levels: the Russian Revolution of 1905 demonstrated the efficacy of the general strike as a revolutionary instrument, but was ultimately suppressed;[60] in 1909, the Catalan syndicalist union Solidaridad Obrera called a general strike against conscription for the Spanish invasion of Morocco, briefly bringing Barcelona under workers' control before the revolt's suppression by government forces;[64] and following the Revolution of 1910 in Portugal, a syndicalist-led general strike briefly brought Lisbon under workers' control before being repressed, resulting in the formation of the National Workers' Union [pt] by Portuguese socialists and anarchists.[65]

In Italy, there was a particularly large wave of general strikes during this period: the general strike of 1904 resulted in no political reforms but strengthened the social movement;[60] in 1908, syndicalists led a two-month general strike in Parma, but were likewise defeated;[66] and in 1911, anarcho-syndicalists mobilised a general strike against the Italian invasion of Libya, blocking troop trains and even assassinating an army officer.[67] This series of syndicalist-led general strikes brought about the establishment of the Italian Syndicalist Union (USI), which itself led a further series of general strikes that culminated in the Red Week of 1914.[68]

Debate in the Second International edit

 
Rosa Luxemburg, a Polish socialist who argued in support of the political general strike in the Labour and Socialist International

In 1889, the Labour and Socialist International was established by classical Marxists and social democrats, such as those of the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD).[69] At the Brussels Congress of 1891, it became clear that the International was already divided over two main tactical issues: electoral politics, which the socialists embraced, but anarchists generally opposed; and, the general strike as a mechanism to prevent war, which anarchists supported, but socialists refused to endorse.[70] As a result, at the Zürich Congress of 1893, anarchists were ejected from the International and banned from attending future congresses.[71] Anarchist trade union delegates from the French CGT and Dutch NAS attempted to continue participation,[72] but after being physically attacked while trying to join the London Congress of 1896, the anarchists finally abandoned the International.[71]

Nevertheless, the anarchist defense of the general strike left a lasting legacy within the International. At the Paris Congress of 1900, the French socialist politician Aristide Briand adopted the idea of the revolutionary general strike in order to boost his popularity with the syndicalists. At the Amsterdam Congress of 1904, another French socialist politician defended the general strike as a means to convince socialist voters that they were not merely supporting career politicians. At the Stuttgart Congress of 1907, the anarchist calls for a general strike to prevent war were taken up by Gustave Hervé, but these were ardently opposed by the German delegates, who feared repression by the authorities.[73] Finally, at the Copenhagen Congress of 1910, a proposal for a general strike to prevent war was put forward by the French socialist Édouard Vaillant and the Scottish labour leader Keir Hardie, but this too was voted down by the other delegates.[74] While it was consistently defeated by the social democrats, the anarchist proposal for a general strike was taken up by members of the far-left, such as Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg, who saw it as an instrument for obtaining political concessions.[75]

 
Pierre Monatte, a French syndicalist who argued in support of the revolutionary general strike at the International Anarchist Congress of Amsterdam

Having been completely frozen out of the International, the anarchists resolved to hold their own International Anarchist Congress, which met in Amsterdam in 1907.[75] The Congress played host to a fierce debate between Errico Malatesta, a proponent of classical anarcho-communism, and Pierre Monatte, a disciple of the new current of anarcho-syndicalism.[76] The latter upheld the central role of the trade union in organising a revolutionary general strike to overthrow capitalism, after which the unions would form the basis for the construction of a new stateless society with a socialist economy.[77] But the advancement of syndicalism was blocked chiefly by Malatesta, who objected to the class reductionism of the syndicalists.[78] Malatesta was particularly critical of the general strike, which he dismissed as a "magic weapon" that was incapable of fighting a violent conflict with state militaries,[79] which had the ability to starve out workers in the event of such an industrial dispute.[80] Although the anarcho-syndicalists had seen the Amsterdam Congress as a means to establish an international anarchist organisation,[81] efforts in this direction were sabotaged by the conflict between the two factions.[82]

Despite all the calls for a general strike to prevent war, by the outbreak of World War I, many socialists dropped their anti-militarism and instead threw their support behind the Allied war effort.[83] The Second International itself collapsed, leaving only anarcho-syndicalists and Bolsheviks to rally an anti-war opposition.[84]

20th century edit

The 1926 United Kingdom general strike started in the coal industry and rapidly escalated; the unions called out 1,750,000 workers, mainly in the transport and steel sectors, although the strike was successfully suppressed by the government.[85][86]

The year 1919 saw a number of general strikes throughout the United States and Canada, including two that were considered significant—the Seattle General Strike, and the Winnipeg General Strike. While the IWW participated in the Seattle General Strike, that action was called by the Seattle Central Labor Union, affiliated with the American Federation of Labor (AFL, predecessor of the AFL–CIO).[87]

In June 1919, the AFL national organisation, in session in Atlantic City, New Jersey, passed resolutions in opposition to the general strike. The official report of these proceedings described the convention as the "largest and in all probability the most important Convention ever held" by the organisation, in part for having engineered the "overwhelming defeat of the so-called Radical element" via crushing a "One Big Union proposition", and also for defeating a proposal for a nationwide general strike, both "by a vote of more than 20 to 1".[88] The AFL amended its constitution to disallow any central labour union (i.e., regional labour councils) from "taking a strike vote without prior authorization of the national officers of the union concerned".[88] The change was intended to "check the spread of general strike sentiment and prevent recurrences of what happened at Seattle and is now going on at Winnipeg".[88] The penalty for any unauthorised strike vote was revocation of that body's charter.[88]

As part of the fight for the Indian independence movement, leader Mahatma Gandhi promoted the use of what is called Hartal, a mass protest and a form of civil disobedience that often involved a total shutdown of workplaces, offices, shops, and courts of law.

Legality edit

In America, after the passage of the anti-union Taft–Hartley Act in 1947, the general strike changed from a tool of labor strike solidarity into a general form of social, political, and economic protest. US Congress passed the law in the wake of the women-led 1946 Oakland General Strike. It outlawed actions taken by unionized workers in support of workers at other companies, effectively rendering both solidarity actions and the general strike itself illegal.[89] Before 1947 and the passage of the Taft–Hartley Act the term general strike meant when various unions would officially go on strike in solidarity with other striking unions. The act made it illegal for one union to go on strike to support another. Hence, the definition and practice of a general strike changed in modern times to mean periodic days of mass action coordinated, often, by unions, but not an official or prolonged strike.

Since then, in the US and Europe the general strike has become a tool of mass economic protest often in conjunction with other forms of electoral action and direct civil action.

Forms edit

Two of the main forms of general strike are: the political strike, which aims to achieve political and economic reform; and the revolutionary strike, which aims to overthrow capitalism and the state in a social revolution.[90] Other forms, identified by Gerhart Niemeyer, include: the general strike as a "revolutionary exercise" which would eventually lead to a transformation of society; a one-day demonstration on International Workers' Day, aimed at identifying a "worldwide proletariat"; and a theoretical mechanism by which to stop wars between nation states.[91]

Industrial unionists such as Ralph Chaplin and Stephen Naft also identified four different levels of general strike, rising from a localised strike, to an industry-wide strike, to a nationwide strike, and finally to a revolutionary strike.[92][93]

Debates on general strikes edit

Socialists versus anarchists edit

In his study of the debates within the Second International, Niemeyer perceived the socialist-friendly general strike for political rights within the system and the general strike as a revolutionary mechanism to overthrow the existing order—which he associated with a "rising anarcho-syndicalist movement"—as mutually exclusive.[94] Niemeyer believed that the difficulty arose from the fact that the general strike was "one instrument", but was frequently considered "without distinction of underlying motives".[60]

Syndicalism and general strikes edit

The Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) began to fully embrace the general strike in 1910–1911.[95] The ultimate goal of the general strike, according to Industrial Workers of the World theory, is to displace capitalists and give control over the means of production to workers.[95][96] In a 1911 speech in New York City, IWW organiser Bill Haywood explained his view of the economic situation, and why he believed a general strike was justified,

The capitalists have wealth; they have money. They invest the money in machinery, in the resources of the earth. They operate a factory, a mine, a railroad, a mill. They will keep that factory running just as long as there are profits coming in. When anything happens to disturb the profits, what do the capitalists do? They go on strike, don't they? They withdraw their finances from that particular mill. They close it down because there are no profits to be made there. They don't care what becomes of the working class. But the working class, on the other hand, has always been taught to take care of the capitalist's interest in the property.[97]

Bill Haywood believed that industrial unionism made possible the general strike, and the general strike made possible industrial democracy.[97] According to Wobbly theory, the conventional strike is an important (but not the only) weapon for improving wages, hours, and working conditions for working people. These strikes are also good training to help workers educate themselves about the class struggle, and about what it will take to execute an eventual general strike for the purpose of achieving industrial democracy.[98] During the final general strike, workers would not walk out of their shops, factories, mines, and mills, but would rather occupy their workplaces and take them over.[98] Prior to taking action to initiate industrial democracy, workers would need to educate themselves with technical and managerial knowledge in order to operate industry.[98]

According to labor historian Philip S. Foner, the Wobbly conception of industrial democracy is intentionally not presented in detail by IWW theorists; in that sense, the details are left to the "future development of society".[99] However, certain concepts are implicit. Industrial democracy will be "a new society [built] within the shell of the old".[100] Members of the industrial union educate themselves to operate industry according to democratic principles, and without the current hierarchical ownership/management structure. Issues such as production and distribution would be managed by the workers themselves.[100]

In 1927 the IWW called for a three-day nationwide walkout to protest the execution of anarchists Ferdinando Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti.[101] The most notable response to the call was in the Walsenburg coal district of Colorado, where 1,132 miners stayed off the job, and only 35 went to work,[102] a participation rate which led directly to the Colorado coal strike of 1927.

On 18 March 2011, the Industrial Workers of the World supported an endorsement of a general strike as a follow-up to protests against Governor Scott Walker's proposed labour legislation in Wisconsin, following a motion passed by the South Central Federation of Labor (SCFL) of Wisconsin endorsing a statewide general strike as a response to those legislative proposals.[103][104] The SCFL website states,

At SCFL's monthly meeting Monday, Feb. 21, delegates endorsed the following: "The SCFL endorses a general strike, possibly for the day Walker signs his 'budget repair bill.'" An ad hoc committee was formed to explore the details. SCFL did not CALL for a general strike because it does not have that authority.[104]

Notable general strikes edit

 
1926 United Kingdom general strike

The largest general strike that ever stopped the economy of an advanced industrial country—and the first general wildcat strike in history—was May 1968 in France.[105] The prolonged strike involved eleven million workers for two weeks in a row,[105] and its impact was such that it almost caused the collapse of the de Gaulle government. Other notable general strikes include:

  • In Portugal, a general strike was called in 2011 by the federation of public labour unions to avert austerity measures.[106]
  • In Honduras, a general strike was called in 2011 by union workers, farmers and other organisations demanding better education, an increase in the minimum wage and against fuel price hikes.[107]
  • In Yemen, thousands of people took the streets in a general strike in 2011 to protest President Ali Abdullah Saleh.[108]
  • In Algeria, public sector workers in 2011 mounted a general strike for higher wages and improved working conditions.[109]
  • In February 1947, General Douglas MacArthur, as Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers in Japan, banned a planned general strike of 2,400,000 government workers, stating that "so deadly a social weapon" as a general strike should not be used in the impoverished and emaciated condition of Japan so soon after World War II. Japan's labour leaders complied with his ban.[110]
  • In June 2022, Tunisian workers initiated a general strike that halted all transportation.[111]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Carpenter 1921, p. 499; Prothero 1974, p. 147.
  2. ^ a b c Prothero 1974, p. 160.
  3. ^ Prothero 1974, pp. 160–161; Spivak 2014, p. 9.
  4. ^ Prothero 1974, pp. 160–161.
  5. ^ Prothero 1974, p. 161.
  6. ^ Prothero 1974, pp. 161–162.
  7. ^ Carpenter 1921, p. 499.
  8. ^ Foner 1998, pp. 116–118.
  9. ^ Carpenter 1921, pp. 491–492; Prothero 1974, pp. 133–134; Spivak 2014, p. 10.
  10. ^ Carpenter 1921, pp. 491–492.
  11. ^ Carpenter 1921, pp. 492–494.
  12. ^ Carpenter 1921, pp. 494–495.
  13. ^ a b Carpenter 1921, p. 497; Prothero 1974, pp. 133.
  14. ^ Carpenter 1921, p. 497; Prothero 1974, pp. 133; Spivak 2014, p. 10.
  15. ^ Carpenter 1921, pp. 495–496.
  16. ^ Carpenter 1921, pp. 497–498.
  17. ^ Carpenter 1921, p. 498.
  18. ^ Carpenter 1921, pp. 498–499.
  19. ^ Mather 1974, pp. 1–2.
  20. ^ Mather 1974, pp. 2–3.
  21. ^ Mather 1974, p. 3.
  22. ^ Tuñón de Lara 1977, pp. 67–68, 105.
  23. ^ Tuñón de Lara 1977, pp. 106–108.
  24. ^ Tuñón de Lara 1977, pp. 108–118.
  25. ^ Spivak 2014, p. 13.
  26. ^ Bilbija, Marina (2011). "Democracy's New Song: "Black Reconstruction in America, 1860-1880" and the Melodramatic Imagination". The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 637: 64–77. doi:10.1177/0002716211407153. ISSN 0002-7162. JSTOR 41328566. S2CID 143636000.
  27. ^ Parfait, Claire (2009). "Rewriting History: The Publication of W. E. B. Du Bois's "Black Reconstruction in America" (1935)". Book History. 12 (1): 266–294. ISSN 1098-7371. JSTOR 40930547.
  28. ^ Taylor, A. A. (1935). "Black Reconstruction: An Essay toward a History of the Part Which Black Folk Played in the Attempt to Reconstruct Democracy in America, 1860-1880 by W. E. Burghardt Du Bois". The New England Quarterly. 8 (4): 608–612. doi:10.2307/360377. ISSN 0028-4866. JSTOR 360377.
  29. ^ Cole, Arthur C. (1936). "Black Reconstruction: An Essay Toward a History of the Part Which Black Folk Played in the Attempt to Reconstruct Democracy in America, 1860-1880 by W. E. Burghardt Du Bois". Mississippi Valley Historical Review. 23 (2): 278–280. doi:10.2307/1893295. ISSN 0161-391X. JSTOR 1893295.
  30. ^ Graham 2018, pp. 326–327.
  31. ^ Graham 2018, pp. 327–328.
  32. ^ Spivak 2014, p. 9.
  33. ^ Graham 2018, p. 329.
  34. ^ Spivak 2014, p. 11.
  35. ^ Graham 2018, p. 331.
  36. ^ Graham 2018, p. 332; Spivak 2014, p. 10.
  37. ^ Graham 2018, p. 332.
  38. ^ van der Walt & Schmidt 2009, pp. 153–154.
  39. ^ Graham 2018, p. 334.
  40. ^ Graham 2018, pp. 334–335.
  41. ^ Graham 2018, pp. 334–335; Spivak 2014, p. 10.
  42. ^ Graham 2018, p. 336.
  43. ^ Graham 2018, pp. 336–337.
  44. ^ Graham 2018, p. 337; van der Walt & Schmidt 2009, p. 155.
  45. ^ Graham 2018, p. 337; Nomad 1966, p. 69; van der Walt & Schmidt 2009, pp. 154–155.
  46. ^ Graham 2018, p. 337; Nomad 1966, p. 69.
  47. ^ Nomad 1966, p. 69.
  48. ^ Graham 2018, pp. 337–339.
  49. ^ Graham 2018, pp. 339–340.
  50. ^ Zimmer 2018, pp. 354–355.
  51. ^ Zimmer 2018, p. 355.
  52. ^ a b Zimmer 2018, pp. 355–356.
  53. ^ Zimmer 2018, p. 356.
  54. ^ Spivak 2014, p. 11; Zimmer 2018, pp. 355–356.
  55. ^ Zimmer 2018, p. 357.
  56. ^ Zimmer 2018, pp. 357–358.
  57. ^ Zimmer 2018, p. 358.
  58. ^ Damier 2009, p. 16.
  59. ^ Damier 2009, p. 17.
  60. ^ a b c d e f Niemeyer 1966, p. 100.
  61. ^ van der Walt & Schmidt 2009, p. 316.
  62. ^ Damier 2009, pp. 19–20; Niemeyer 1966, p. 100.
  63. ^ Damier 2009, pp. 19–20.
  64. ^ van der Walt & Schmidt 2009, p. 214.
  65. ^ Damier 2009, pp. 18–19.
  66. ^ van der Walt & Schmidt 2009, p. 282.
  67. ^ van der Walt & Schmidt 2009, pp. 214–215.
  68. ^ Damier 2009, pp. 17–18; van der Walt & Schmidt 2009, p. 276.
  69. ^ van der Walt & Schmidt 2009, p. 23.
  70. ^ Nomad 1966, pp. 80–81.
  71. ^ a b Nomad 1966, p. 81; van der Walt & Schmidt 2009, p. 276.
  72. ^ Nomad 1966, p. 81.
  73. ^ Nomad 1966, p. 82.
  74. ^ Nomad 1966, pp. 82–83.
  75. ^ a b Nomad 1966, p. 83.
  76. ^ Nomad 1966, pp. 83–84; van der Walt & Schmidt 2009, pp. 181–182.
  77. ^ Nomad 1966, p. 84.
  78. ^ Nomad 1966, pp. 85–86; van der Walt & Schmidt 2009, p. 183.
  79. ^ Nomad 1966, p. 86.
  80. ^ Nomad 1966, p. 86; van der Walt & Schmidt 2009, p. 183.
  81. ^ Nomad 1966, p. 85.
  82. ^ Nomad 1966, pp. 86–87.
  83. ^ Nomad 1966, p. 87; van der Walt & Schmidt 2009, p. 216.
  84. ^ van der Walt & Schmidt 2009, pp. 23, 216–217.
  85. ^ G A. Phillips, The General Strike: The Politics of Industrial Conflict (1976)
  86. ^ Keith Laybourn, The General Strike of 1926 (1993)
  87. ^ "Seattle General Strike". depts.washington.edu. from the original on 27 September 2021. Retrieved 27 September 2021.
  88. ^ a b c d Sheet Metal Workers' Journal, Amalgamated Sheet Metal Workers' International Alliance, Volumes 24-25, Chicago, Illinois, 1919, pages 265-267
  89. ^ Kelly, Kim (30 January 2022). "Everything You Need to Know About General Strikes". Teen Vogue. from the original on 30 January 2022. Retrieved 30 January 2022.
  90. ^ Niemeyer 1966, pp. 99–100; Spivak 2014, p. 11.
  91. ^ Niemeyer 1966, pp. 99–100.
  92. ^ Chaplin, Ralph (1985) [1933]. The General Strike. Industrial Workers of the World. Retrieved 20 February 2023.
  93. ^ Naft, Stephen (June 1905). The Social General Strike, Debating Club No. 1. Translated by Roller, Arnold. Chicago. pp. 5–6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  94. ^ Niemeyer 1966, p. 99.
  95. ^ a b Foner 1997, p. 140.
  96. ^ Dubofsky 2000, p. 90.
  97. ^ a b Bill Haywood, The General Strike (Chicago, n.d.), pamphlet, published by Industrial Workers of the World, from a New York City speech delivered March 16, 1911.
  98. ^ a b c Foner 1997, p. 141.
  99. ^ Foner 1997, pp. 141–142.
  100. ^ a b Foner 1997, p. 142.
  101. ^ McClurg 1963, p. 71.
  102. ^ McClurg 1963, p. 72.
  103. ^ "General Strike in Wisconsin!". Industrial Workers of the World. from the original on 21 January 2013. Retrieved 9 April 2011.
  104. ^ a b "South Central Federation of Labor". from the original on 9 April 2021. Retrieved 9 April 2011.
  105. ^ a b The Beginning of an Era 10 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine, from Situationist International No 12 (September 1969). Translated by Ken Knabb.
  106. ^ The Wall Street Journal http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20110408-702627.html 8 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 9 April 2011
  107. ^ Cuevas, Freddy (1 April 2011). "Teachers strike fuels unrest in polarized Honduras". San Diego Union-Tribune. Retrieved 2 March 2022.
  108. ^ ABC News, http://www.abc.net.au/pm/content/2011/s3185314.htm 9 April 2021 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 9 April 2011
  109. ^ Magharebia, http://www.magharebia.com/cocoon/awi/xhtml1/en_GB/features/awi/newsbriefs/general/2011/04/07/newsbrief-03 9 April 2021 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 9 April 2011
  110. ^ The Sydney Morning Herald, 1 February 1947, page 1
  111. ^ "Tunisian general strike to cancel international flights, and halt land and sea transportation". Middle East Eye. 16 June 2022.

Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • Chronology of general strikes
  • The Mass Strike by Rosa Luxemburg (1906).
  • From chartists.net, downloaded 5 June 2006.
  • Strike! Famous Worker Uprisings 18 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine—slideshow by Life magazine.
  • Seattle General Strike Project

general, strike, general, strike, strike, action, which, participants, cease, economic, activity, such, working, strengthen, bargaining, position, trade, union, achieve, common, social, political, goal, they, organised, large, coalitions, political, social, la. A general strike is a strike action in which participants cease all economic activity such as working to strengthen the bargaining position of a trade union or achieve a common social or political goal They are organised by large coalitions of political social and labour organizations and may also include rallies marches boycotts civil disobedience non payment of taxes and other forms of direct or indirect action Additionally general strikes might exclude care workers such as teachers doctors and nurses Historically the term general strike has referred primarily to solidarity action which is a multi sector strike that is organised by trade unions who strike together in order to force pressure on employers to begin negotiations or offer more favourable terms to the strikers though not all strikers may have a material interest in each other s negotiations they all have a material interest in maintaining and strengthening the collective efficacy of strikes as a bargaining tool Contents 1 History 1 1 Precursors 1 2 Conception 1 3 Early expressions 1 4 Debate in the First International 1 5 Rise of revolutionary syndicalism 1 6 Debate in the Second International 1 7 20th century 1 7 1 Legality 2 Forms 3 Debates on general strikes 3 1 Socialists versus anarchists 3 2 Syndicalism and general strikes 4 Notable general strikes 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksHistory editPrecursors edit nbsp Constantin Francois de Chassebœuf whose early conception of the general strike lay the groundwork for its systematic formulation in the 19th centuryAn early predecessor of the general strike were the Jewish traditions of the Sabbatical and Jubilee years the latter of which involves widespread debt relief and land redistribution 1 The secessio plebis during the times of the Roman Republic has also been noted as a precursor to the general strike 2 Early conceptions of the general strike were proposed during the Renaissance by Etienne de La Boetie 2 and during the Age of Enlightenment by Jean Meslier and Honore Gabriel Riqueti 3 With the outbreak of the French Revolution the idea was taken up by radicals such as Jean Paul Marat Sylvain Marechal and Constantin Francois de Chassebœuf who proposed a strike that included merchants and industrialists alongside industrial workers and farmworkers 4 In his essay Les Ruines Chassebœuf proposed a general strike by every profession useful to society against the civil military or religious agents of government contrasting the People against the men who do nothing 5 Chassebœuf s work held a great influence in Great Britain where it was distributed throughout the country by the London Corresponding Society while his chapter on the general strike was reprinted for decades after its initial publication 6 The idea was later taken up by the British economist Thomas Attwood and the French communist Louis Auguste Blanqui 2 During the early years of the Industrial Revolution an ill defined conception of a general strike was expressed by workers in Nottingham and Manchester but it lacked a systematic formulation 7 There were periodical strikes throughout the early 19th century that could loosely be considered as general strikes In the United States the 1835 Philadelphia General Strike lasted for three weeks after which the striking workers won their goal of a ten hour workday and an increase in wages 8 Conception edit nbsp William Benbow pictured in Punch in 1848The idea of the general strike was first formulated by William Benbow 9 a Quaker and shoemaker that became involved in the British radical movement of the early 19th century 10 After he was arrested for his political activities Benbow turned away from reformism and began to publish a number of anti authoritarian and anti clerical polemics 11 At meetings of the National Union of the Working Classes Benbow expressed impatience with the progress of the Reform Bill and called for armed resistance against the government 12 In January 1832 Benbow published a pamphlet titled Grand National Holiday and Congress of the Productive Classes in which outlined his proposals for a general strike 13 Benbow called for workers themselves to declare a month long holiday 14 which would be financially supported first by workers savings and then by exacting contributions from the wealthy He also proposed the formation of workers councils to keep the peace distribute food and elect delegates to a congress which would itself carry out wide reaching societal reforms 13 Months after the pamphlet s publication Benbow was arrested for leading a 100 000 strong demonstration which he had intended as a dress rehearsal for his proposed national holiday 15 The passage of the Reform Act brought with it the collapse of the radical movement including Benbow s National Union But six years later in an atmosphere of rising disillusionment with the progress of political reform the nascent Chartist movement adopted Benbow s platform for a national holiday 16 The Chartists planned to carry out their month long national holiday in August 1839 but following Benbow s arrest the campaign was abandoned 17 Benbow was tried and found guilty of sedition Although he attempted to continue his Chartist activities from prison after being excommunicated from the movement by Feargus O Connor Benbow ceased his political activities 18 Early expressions edit nbsp Statue commemorating the 1842 general strikeIn April 1842 after the second Chartist Petition was rejected by the British Parliament demands for fairer wages and conditions across many different industries finally exploded into the first general strike in a capitalist country 19 The strike began in the coal mines of Staffordshire and soon spread throughout Britain affecting factories mills and mines from Scotland to South Wales 20 Although the general strike started as an apolitical demand for better working conditions by August 1842 it became directly associated with the Chartists and took on a revolutionary character But government forces intervened cracking down on the protests and arresting its leaders eventually forcing a return to work 21 Strike actions by workers in Barcelona played a prominent role in the Spanish Revolution of 1854 which gave way to a progressive period that extended a number of civil liberties to Spanish workers 22 But labour unrest grew as the new authorities again prohibited freedom of association and work stoppages leading to the outbreak of the 1855 Catalan general strike the first in Spanish history 23 After months of strike action and attempted negotitations the general strike was suppressed and the draft constitution suspended in a coup by Leopoldo O Donnell 24 During the American Civil War millions of black slaves escaped southern plantations and fled to Union territory depriving the Confederacy of its main source of labour in what W E B Du Bois described as a general strike in his book Black Reconstruction in America 25 26 However this conception were rebuffed by African American economist Abram Lincoln Harris who dismissed Du Bois claims of a general strike as fantastical 27 A A Taylor also rejected Du Bois interpretation noting that the flight from the plantations did not constitute an organised movement to achieve economic or political concessions 28 And American historian Arthur Charles Cole criticised what he described as discrepancies between well established facts and extravagant generalization in Du Bois claims of a general strike 29 Debate in the First International edit nbsp Mikhail Bakunin leader of the anti authoritarian faction of First International which advocated for a revolutionary general strike to overthrow the state and capitalismIn 1864 the International Workingmen s Association IWA was established as a federation of trade unions by delegates from England and France 30 The French trade union delegates such as Eugene Varlin saw the nascent International as a means to coordinate support for strike actions by its members 31 In the first volume of Das Kapital published in 1867 Karl Marx conceived of the general strike as a means by which to build class consciousness 32 At the International s Brussels Congress of 1868 the Belgian delegate Cesar De Paepe proposed that a general strike could be used to prevent the outbreak of war which he considered to be a means for the ruling class to subordinate working people He further declared that trade unions themselves constituted the mechanism for replacing capitalism with socialism the establishment of which would put a final end to all wars 33 In a letter to Friedrich Engels Marx himself rejected what he described as the Belgian nonsense that it was necessary to strike against war 34 When Mikhail Bakunin joined the International the following year he declared his own support for these proposals 35 Bakunin rejected political participation instead advocating for workers to take strike actions to improve their working conditions 36 He argued that the International could be the organisation through which trade unions could build such strike actions into a revolutionary general strike which would abolish capitalism and institute socialism 37 The proposals for a revolutionary general strike to overthrow the state were rejected by the Marxist faction 38 who instead proposed the creation of political parties to take state power 39 Through the General Council which had centralised control over the International 40 Marx moved to expel Bakunin s anti authoritarian faction at the Hague Congress of 1872 41 In response the expelled sections established the Anti Authoritarian International which was designed to operate according to a federal structure 42 The anti authoritarians upheld the syndicalist view of using the International as a coordinating body to support strike actions and build them towards a revolutionary general strike which would overthrow the state and establish workers control over the means of production 43 This view was particularly supported by the Spanish Regional Federation which itself organised a general strike in Alcoy although it was quickly put down by Spanish government forces 44 At the Geneva Congress of 1873 Belgian delegates proposed the adoption of the general strike as a tactic for social revolution 45 This motion was supported by the Jura Federation which additionally stressed the need for smaller strikes as a means to achieve wage increases 46 The discussions over strike action at the Geneva Congress lay the foundations for what was to become known as anarcho syndicalism 47 But before long the anti authoritarians began to move away from the anarcho syndicalist model Members of the Belgian section began to advocate for a dictatorship of the proletariat and electoralism while the French and Italian sections moved towards anarcho communism and proposed the theory of propaganda of the deed 48 By 1880 the debates within the International had led to its collapse 49 Rise of revolutionary syndicalism edit nbsp Engraving depicting the Haymarket affair of 1886In 1881 a revolutionary socialist faction of the Socialist Labor Party of America SLPA split off and established the International Working People s Association IWPA which developed anarchist tendencies and held itself to be a continuation of the defunct IWA 50 Inspired by the example of the Paris Commune IWPA members such as the Chicago anarchist Albert Parsons formulated a kind of revolutionary syndicalism that eschewed the general strike in favour of popular insurrection 51 In response to the repression of the Great Railroad Strike of 1877 the IWPA armed and drilled its members into workers militias seeing violent action as a necessary compliment to strike action 52 On 1 May 1886 the IWPA organised a nationwide general strike for the eight hour day which had been a focus of demands for Parsons and the Chicago anarchists 53 Throughout the United States hundreds of thousands of workers went on strike 52 The general strike s epicenter was in Chicago where protests against the police repression of striking workers escalated into a riot 54 Eight of the protest s organisers including Parsons were executed by hanging on charges of conspiracy In the wake of their execution the IWPA demand for the eight hour day spread around the world and 1 May was declared International Workers Day 55 Inspired by the IWPA s general strike European anarchists began to reconsider the general strike as a revolutionary instrument with the French anarchist Joseph Tortelier taking up the idea of the revolutionary general strike which then spread to Italian and Spanish anarchists Albert Parsons wife Lucy Parsons also adopted the revolutionary general strike in her own platform which became a founding precept of the Industrial Workers of the World IWW 56 The first trade union to adopt the revolutionary general strike into its platform was the French General Confederation of Labour CGT 57 The CGT launched its own campaign for workers themselves to institute the eight hour day culminating in a general strike which secured French workers a reduction in working time and workload an increase in wages and the introduction of the weekend 58 The CGT s example accelerated the spread of revolutionary syndicalism throughout the world 59 bringing with it a wave of general strikes at the turn of the 20th century to mixed results 60 Although the Belgian general strike of 1893 was halted in order to prevent damage to the workers movement it eventually won its demand of universal manhood suffrage 60 Following the Cuban War of Independence in 1902 anarcho syndicalists organised the country s first general strike against the government of the new Republic of Cuba 61 In the Netherlands the railroad strikes of 1903 resulted in harsh repression against the Dutch workers movement 60 The Swedish general strike of 1909 was broken up without achieving its demands 62 accelerating the split of syndicalists from the social democratic unions and the formation of the Central Organisation of the Workers of Sweden SAC 63 nbsp The 1905 general strike in Tampere Grand Duchy of FinlandSome of the general strikes of this period reached revolutionary levels the Russian Revolution of 1905 demonstrated the efficacy of the general strike as a revolutionary instrument but was ultimately suppressed 60 in 1909 the Catalan syndicalist union Solidaridad Obrera called a general strike against conscription for the Spanish invasion of Morocco briefly bringing Barcelona under workers control before the revolt s suppression by government forces 64 and following the Revolution of 1910 in Portugal a syndicalist led general strike briefly brought Lisbon under workers control before being repressed resulting in the formation of the National Workers Union pt by Portuguese socialists and anarchists 65 In Italy there was a particularly large wave of general strikes during this period the general strike of 1904 resulted in no political reforms but strengthened the social movement 60 in 1908 syndicalists led a two month general strike in Parma but were likewise defeated 66 and in 1911 anarcho syndicalists mobilised a general strike against the Italian invasion of Libya blocking troop trains and even assassinating an army officer 67 This series of syndicalist led general strikes brought about the establishment of the Italian Syndicalist Union USI which itself led a further series of general strikes that culminated in the Red Week of 1914 68 Debate in the Second International edit nbsp Rosa Luxemburg a Polish socialist who argued in support of the political general strike in the Labour and Socialist InternationalIn 1889 the Labour and Socialist International was established by classical Marxists and social democrats such as those of the Social Democratic Party of Germany SPD 69 At the Brussels Congress of 1891 it became clear that the International was already divided over two main tactical issues electoral politics which the socialists embraced but anarchists generally opposed and the general strike as a mechanism to prevent war which anarchists supported but socialists refused to endorse 70 As a result at the Zurich Congress of 1893 anarchists were ejected from the International and banned from attending future congresses 71 Anarchist trade union delegates from the French CGT and Dutch NAS attempted to continue participation 72 but after being physically attacked while trying to join the London Congress of 1896 the anarchists finally abandoned the International 71 Nevertheless the anarchist defense of the general strike left a lasting legacy within the International At the Paris Congress of 1900 the French socialist politician Aristide Briand adopted the idea of the revolutionary general strike in order to boost his popularity with the syndicalists At the Amsterdam Congress of 1904 another French socialist politician defended the general strike as a means to convince socialist voters that they were not merely supporting career politicians At the Stuttgart Congress of 1907 the anarchist calls for a general strike to prevent war were taken up by Gustave Herve but these were ardently opposed by the German delegates who feared repression by the authorities 73 Finally at the Copenhagen Congress of 1910 a proposal for a general strike to prevent war was put forward by the French socialist Edouard Vaillant and the Scottish labour leader Keir Hardie but this too was voted down by the other delegates 74 While it was consistently defeated by the social democrats the anarchist proposal for a general strike was taken up by members of the far left such as Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg who saw it as an instrument for obtaining political concessions 75 nbsp Pierre Monatte a French syndicalist who argued in support of the revolutionary general strike at the International Anarchist Congress of AmsterdamHaving been completely frozen out of the International the anarchists resolved to hold their own International Anarchist Congress which met in Amsterdam in 1907 75 The Congress played host to a fierce debate between Errico Malatesta a proponent of classical anarcho communism and Pierre Monatte a disciple of the new current of anarcho syndicalism 76 The latter upheld the central role of the trade union in organising a revolutionary general strike to overthrow capitalism after which the unions would form the basis for the construction of a new stateless society with a socialist economy 77 But the advancement of syndicalism was blocked chiefly by Malatesta who objected to the class reductionism of the syndicalists 78 Malatesta was particularly critical of the general strike which he dismissed as a magic weapon that was incapable of fighting a violent conflict with state militaries 79 which had the ability to starve out workers in the event of such an industrial dispute 80 Although the anarcho syndicalists had seen the Amsterdam Congress as a means to establish an international anarchist organisation 81 efforts in this direction were sabotaged by the conflict between the two factions 82 Despite all the calls for a general strike to prevent war by the outbreak of World War I many socialists dropped their anti militarism and instead threw their support behind the Allied war effort 83 The Second International itself collapsed leaving only anarcho syndicalists and Bolsheviks to rally an anti war opposition 84 20th century edit The 1926 United Kingdom general strike started in the coal industry and rapidly escalated the unions called out 1 750 000 workers mainly in the transport and steel sectors although the strike was successfully suppressed by the government 85 86 The year 1919 saw a number of general strikes throughout the United States and Canada including two that were considered significant the Seattle General Strike and the Winnipeg General Strike While the IWW participated in the Seattle General Strike that action was called by the Seattle Central Labor Union affiliated with the American Federation of Labor AFL predecessor of the AFL CIO 87 In June 1919 the AFL national organisation in session in Atlantic City New Jersey passed resolutions in opposition to the general strike The official report of these proceedings described the convention as the largest and in all probability the most important Convention ever held by the organisation in part for having engineered the overwhelming defeat of the so called Radical element via crushing a One Big Union proposition and also for defeating a proposal for a nationwide general strike both by a vote of more than 20 to 1 88 The AFL amended its constitution to disallow any central labour union i e regional labour councils from taking a strike vote without prior authorization of the national officers of the union concerned 88 The change was intended to check the spread of general strike sentiment and prevent recurrences of what happened at Seattle and is now going on at Winnipeg 88 The penalty for any unauthorised strike vote was revocation of that body s charter 88 As part of the fight for the Indian independence movement leader Mahatma Gandhi promoted the use of what is called Hartal a mass protest and a form of civil disobedience that often involved a total shutdown of workplaces offices shops and courts of law Legality edit In America after the passage of the anti union Taft Hartley Act in 1947 the general strike changed from a tool of labor strike solidarity into a general form of social political and economic protest US Congress passed the law in the wake of the women led 1946 Oakland General Strike It outlawed actions taken by unionized workers in support of workers at other companies effectively rendering both solidarity actions and the general strike itself illegal 89 Before 1947 and the passage of the Taft Hartley Act the term general strike meant when various unions would officially go on strike in solidarity with other striking unions The act made it illegal for one union to go on strike to support another Hence the definition and practice of a general strike changed in modern times to mean periodic days of mass action coordinated often by unions but not an official or prolonged strike Since then in the US and Europe the general strike has become a tool of mass economic protest often in conjunction with other forms of electoral action and direct civil action Forms editTwo of the main forms of general strike are the political strike which aims to achieve political and economic reform and the revolutionary strike which aims to overthrow capitalism and the state in a social revolution 90 Other forms identified by Gerhart Niemeyer include the general strike as a revolutionary exercise which would eventually lead to a transformation of society a one day demonstration on International Workers Day aimed at identifying a worldwide proletariat and a theoretical mechanism by which to stop wars between nation states 91 Industrial unionists such as Ralph Chaplin and Stephen Naft also identified four different levels of general strike rising from a localised strike to an industry wide strike to a nationwide strike and finally to a revolutionary strike 92 93 Debates on general strikes editSocialists versus anarchists edit In his study of the debates within the Second International Niemeyer perceived the socialist friendly general strike for political rights within the system and the general strike as a revolutionary mechanism to overthrow the existing order which he associated with a rising anarcho syndicalist movement as mutually exclusive 94 Niemeyer believed that the difficulty arose from the fact that the general strike was one instrument but was frequently considered without distinction of underlying motives 60 Syndicalism and general strikes edit The Industrial Workers of the World IWW began to fully embrace the general strike in 1910 1911 95 The ultimate goal of the general strike according to Industrial Workers of the World theory is to displace capitalists and give control over the means of production to workers 95 96 In a 1911 speech in New York City IWW organiser Bill Haywood explained his view of the economic situation and why he believed a general strike was justified The capitalists have wealth they have money They invest the money in machinery in the resources of the earth They operate a factory a mine a railroad a mill They will keep that factory running just as long as there are profits coming in When anything happens to disturb the profits what do the capitalists do They go on strike don t they They withdraw their finances from that particular mill They close it down because there are no profits to be made there They don t care what becomes of the working class But the working class on the other hand has always been taught to take care of the capitalist s interest in the property 97 Bill Haywood believed that industrial unionism made possible the general strike and the general strike made possible industrial democracy 97 According to Wobbly theory the conventional strike is an important but not the only weapon for improving wages hours and working conditions for working people These strikes are also good training to help workers educate themselves about the class struggle and about what it will take to execute an eventual general strike for the purpose of achieving industrial democracy 98 During the final general strike workers would not walk out of their shops factories mines and mills but would rather occupy their workplaces and take them over 98 Prior to taking action to initiate industrial democracy workers would need to educate themselves with technical and managerial knowledge in order to operate industry 98 According to labor historian Philip S Foner the Wobbly conception of industrial democracy is intentionally not presented in detail by IWW theorists in that sense the details are left to the future development of society 99 However certain concepts are implicit Industrial democracy will be a new society built within the shell of the old 100 Members of the industrial union educate themselves to operate industry according to democratic principles and without the current hierarchical ownership management structure Issues such as production and distribution would be managed by the workers themselves 100 In 1927 the IWW called for a three day nationwide walkout to protest the execution of anarchists Ferdinando Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti 101 The most notable response to the call was in the Walsenburg coal district of Colorado where 1 132 miners stayed off the job and only 35 went to work 102 a participation rate which led directly to the Colorado coal strike of 1927 On 18 March 2011 the Industrial Workers of the World supported an endorsement of a general strike as a follow up to protests against Governor Scott Walker s proposed labour legislation in Wisconsin following a motion passed by the South Central Federation of Labor SCFL of Wisconsin endorsing a statewide general strike as a response to those legislative proposals 103 104 The SCFL website states At SCFL s monthly meeting Monday Feb 21 delegates endorsed the following The SCFL endorses a general strike possibly for the day Walker signs his budget repair bill An ad hoc committee was formed to explore the details SCFL did not CALL for a general strike because it does not have that authority 104 Notable general strikes editSee also List of strikes Chronological list of general strikes nbsp 1926 United Kingdom general strikeThe largest general strike that ever stopped the economy of an advanced industrial country and the first general wildcat strike in history was May 1968 in France 105 The prolonged strike involved eleven million workers for two weeks in a row 105 and its impact was such that it almost caused the collapse of the de Gaulle government Other notable general strikes include In Portugal a general strike was called in 2011 by the federation of public labour unions to avert austerity measures 106 In Honduras a general strike was called in 2011 by union workers farmers and other organisations demanding better education an increase in the minimum wage and against fuel price hikes 107 In Yemen thousands of people took the streets in a general strike in 2011 to protest President Ali Abdullah Saleh 108 In Algeria public sector workers in 2011 mounted a general strike for higher wages and improved working conditions 109 In February 1947 General Douglas MacArthur as Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers in Japan banned a planned general strike of 2 400 000 government workers stating that so deadly a social weapon as a general strike should not be used in the impoverished and emaciated condition of Japan so soon after World War II Japan s labour leaders complied with his ban 110 In June 2022 Tunisian workers initiated a general strike that halted all transportation 111 See also edit nbsp Organized labour portalCivil disobedience Civil resistance Critique of work Demonstration political Direct action Earth Strike Georges Sorel Hartal Industrial Workers of the World Industrial unionism List of strikes Nonviolent resistance Occupation of factories Protest Secessio plebis Stay away Syndicalism Workers self managementReferences edit Carpenter 1921 p 499 Prothero 1974 p 147 a b c Prothero 1974 p 160 Prothero 1974 pp 160 161 Spivak 2014 p 9 Prothero 1974 pp 160 161 Prothero 1974 p 161 Prothero 1974 pp 161 162 Carpenter 1921 p 499 Foner 1998 pp 116 118 Carpenter 1921 pp 491 492 Prothero 1974 pp 133 134 Spivak 2014 p 10 Carpenter 1921 pp 491 492 Carpenter 1921 pp 492 494 Carpenter 1921 pp 494 495 a b Carpenter 1921 p 497 Prothero 1974 pp 133 Carpenter 1921 p 497 Prothero 1974 pp 133 Spivak 2014 p 10 Carpenter 1921 pp 495 496 Carpenter 1921 pp 497 498 Carpenter 1921 p 498 Carpenter 1921 pp 498 499 Mather 1974 pp 1 2 Mather 1974 pp 2 3 Mather 1974 p 3 Tunon de Lara 1977 pp 67 68 105 Tunon de Lara 1977 pp 106 108 Tunon de Lara 1977 pp 108 118 Spivak 2014 p 13 Bilbija Marina 2011 Democracy s New Song Black Reconstruction in America 1860 1880 and the Melodramatic Imagination The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 637 64 77 doi 10 1177 0002716211407153 ISSN 0002 7162 JSTOR 41328566 S2CID 143636000 Parfait Claire 2009 Rewriting History The Publication of W E B Du Bois s Black Reconstruction in America 1935 Book History 12 1 266 294 ISSN 1098 7371 JSTOR 40930547 Taylor A A 1935 Black Reconstruction An Essay toward a History of the Part Which Black Folk Played in the Attempt to Reconstruct Democracy in America 1860 1880 by W E Burghardt Du Bois The New England Quarterly 8 4 608 612 doi 10 2307 360377 ISSN 0028 4866 JSTOR 360377 Cole Arthur C 1936 Black Reconstruction An Essay Toward a History of the Part Which Black Folk Played in the Attempt to Reconstruct Democracy in America 1860 1880 by W E Burghardt Du Bois Mississippi Valley Historical Review 23 2 278 280 doi 10 2307 1893295 ISSN 0161 391X JSTOR 1893295 Graham 2018 pp 326 327 Graham 2018 pp 327 328 Spivak 2014 p 9 Graham 2018 p 329 Spivak 2014 p 11 Graham 2018 p 331 Graham 2018 p 332 Spivak 2014 p 10 Graham 2018 p 332 van der Walt amp Schmidt 2009 pp 153 154 Graham 2018 p 334 Graham 2018 pp 334 335 Graham 2018 pp 334 335 Spivak 2014 p 10 Graham 2018 p 336 Graham 2018 pp 336 337 Graham 2018 p 337 van der Walt amp Schmidt 2009 p 155 Graham 2018 p 337 Nomad 1966 p 69 van der Walt amp Schmidt 2009 pp 154 155 Graham 2018 p 337 Nomad 1966 p 69 Nomad 1966 p 69 Graham 2018 pp 337 339 Graham 2018 pp 339 340 Zimmer 2018 pp 354 355 Zimmer 2018 p 355 a b Zimmer 2018 pp 355 356 Zimmer 2018 p 356 Spivak 2014 p 11 Zimmer 2018 pp 355 356 Zimmer 2018 p 357 Zimmer 2018 pp 357 358 Zimmer 2018 p 358 Damier 2009 p 16 Damier 2009 p 17 a b c d e f Niemeyer 1966 p 100 van der Walt amp Schmidt 2009 p 316 Damier 2009 pp 19 20 Niemeyer 1966 p 100 Damier 2009 pp 19 20 van der Walt amp Schmidt 2009 p 214 Damier 2009 pp 18 19 van der Walt amp Schmidt 2009 p 282 van der Walt amp Schmidt 2009 pp 214 215 Damier 2009 pp 17 18 van der Walt amp Schmidt 2009 p 276 van der Walt amp Schmidt 2009 p 23 Nomad 1966 pp 80 81 a b Nomad 1966 p 81 van der Walt amp Schmidt 2009 p 276 Nomad 1966 p 81 Nomad 1966 p 82 Nomad 1966 pp 82 83 a b Nomad 1966 p 83 Nomad 1966 pp 83 84 van der Walt amp Schmidt 2009 pp 181 182 Nomad 1966 p 84 Nomad 1966 pp 85 86 van der Walt amp Schmidt 2009 p 183 Nomad 1966 p 86 Nomad 1966 p 86 van der Walt amp Schmidt 2009 p 183 Nomad 1966 p 85 Nomad 1966 pp 86 87 Nomad 1966 p 87 van der Walt amp Schmidt 2009 p 216 van der Walt amp Schmidt 2009 pp 23 216 217 G A Phillips The General Strike The Politics of Industrial Conflict 1976 Keith Laybourn The General Strike of 1926 1993 Seattle General Strike depts washington edu Archived from the original on 27 September 2021 Retrieved 27 September 2021 a b c d Sheet Metal Workers Journal Amalgamated Sheet Metal Workers International Alliance Volumes 24 25 Chicago Illinois 1919 pages 265 267 Kelly Kim 30 January 2022 Everything You Need to Know About General Strikes Teen Vogue Archived from the original on 30 January 2022 Retrieved 30 January 2022 Niemeyer 1966 pp 99 100 Spivak 2014 p 11 Niemeyer 1966 pp 99 100 Chaplin Ralph 1985 1933 The General Strike Industrial Workers of the World Retrieved 20 February 2023 Naft Stephen June 1905 The Social General Strike Debating Club No 1 Translated by Roller Arnold Chicago pp 5 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Niemeyer 1966 p 99 a b Foner 1997 p 140 Dubofsky 2000 p 90 a b Bill Haywood The General Strike Chicago n d pamphlet published by Industrial Workers of the World from a New York City speech delivered March 16 1911 a b c Foner 1997 p 141 Foner 1997 pp 141 142 a b Foner 1997 p 142 McClurg 1963 p 71 McClurg 1963 p 72 General Strike in Wisconsin Industrial Workers of the World Archived from the original on 21 January 2013 Retrieved 9 April 2011 a b South Central Federation of Labor Archived from the original on 9 April 2021 Retrieved 9 April 2011 a b The Beginning of an Era Archived 10 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine from Situationist International No 12 September 1969 Translated by Ken Knabb The Wall Street Journal http online wsj com article BT CO 20110408 702627 html Archived 8 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 9 April 2011 Cuevas Freddy 1 April 2011 Teachers strike fuels unrest in polarized Honduras San Diego Union Tribune Retrieved 2 March 2022 ABC News http www abc net au pm content 2011 s3185314 htm Archived 9 April 2021 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 9 April 2011 Magharebia http www magharebia com cocoon awi xhtml1 en GB features awi newsbriefs general 2011 04 07 newsbrief 03 Archived 9 April 2021 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 9 April 2011 The Sydney Morning Herald 1 February 1947 page 1 Tunisian general strike to cancel international flights and halt land and sea transportation Middle East Eye 16 June 2022 Bibliography editAdams Matthew S 2018 Anarchism and the First International In Adams Matthew S Levy Carl eds The Palgrave Handbook of Anarchism London Palgrave Macmillan pp 389 408 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 75620 2 23 ISBN 978 3319756196 S2CID 158605651 Carpenter Niles May 1921 William Benbow and the Origin of the General Strike The Quarterly Journal of Economics 35 3 491 499 doi 10 2307 1884099 ISSN 0033 5533 JSTOR 1884099 OCLC 5791147291 D Agostino Anthony 2018 Anarchism and Marxism in the Russian Revolution In Adams Matthew S Levy Carl eds The Palgrave Handbook of Anarchism London Palgrave Macmillan pp 409 428 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 75620 2 24 ISBN 978 3319756196 S2CID 158605651 Damier Vadim 2009 2000 Anarcho syndicalism in the 20th Century Translated by Archibald Malcolm Edmonton Black Cat Press ISBN 978 0 9737827 6 9 Dubofsky Melvyn 2000 We Shall Be All A History of the Industrial Workers of the World Abridged ed University of Illinois Press ISBN 0 252 06905 6 LCCN 00 008215 Foner Philip S 1997 1965 History of the Labor Movement in the United States Vol 4 International Publishers ISBN 0 7178 0396 1 LCCN 47 19381 Foner Philip S 1998 1947 History of the Labor Movement in the United States Vol 1 International Publishers ISBN 0 7178 0376 7 LCCN 47 19381 Goodstein Phil H 1984 The Theory of the General Strike From the French Revolution To Poland Columbia University Press ISBN 0 88033 050 3 LCCN 83 83003 Graham Robert 2018 Anarchism and the First International In Adams Matthew S Levy Carl eds The Palgrave Handbook of Anarchism London Palgrave Macmillan pp 325 342 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 75620 2 19 ISBN 978 3319756196 S2CID 158605651 Mather F C 1974 The General Strike of 1842 In Quinault R Stevenson J eds Popular Protest and Public Order Routledge pp 1 26 doi 10 4324 9781003186892 3 ISBN 9781003186892 S2CID 242636272 McClurg Donald J 1963 The Colorado Coal Strike of 1927 Tactical Leadership of the IWW Labor History 4 1 68 92 doi 10 1080 00236566308583916 ISSN 1469 9702 Niemeyer Gerhart 1966 The Second International 1889 1914 In Drachkovitch Milorad M ed The Revolutionary Internationals 1864 1943 Stanford University Press pp 95 127 LCCN 66015299 Nomad Max 1966 The Anarchist Tradition In Drachkovitch Milorad M ed The Revolutionary Internationals 1864 1943 Stanford University Press pp 57 92 LCCN 66015299 Prothero Iorwerth May 1974 William Benbow and the Concept of the General Strike Past amp Present Oxford University Press 63 63 132 171 doi 10 1093 past 63 1 132 ISSN 0031 2746 JSTOR 650291 OCLC 5549144804 Tunon de Lara Manuel 1977 1972 El movimiento obrero en la historia de Espana I 1832 1899 in Spanish 2ª ed Barcelona Laia ISBN 84 7222 331 0 Slobodin Henry December 1916 The General Strike International Socialist Review 17 6 353 355 Spivak Gayatri Chakravorty 2014 General strike Rethinking Marxism 26 1 9 14 doi 10 1080 08935696 2014 857839 ISSN 1475 8059 S2CID 219715518 van der Walt Lucien Schmidt Michael 2009 Black Flame The Revolutionary Class Politics of Anarchism and Syndicalism Edinburgh AK Press ISBN 978 1 904859 16 1 LCCN 2006933558 OCLC 1100238201 van der Walt Lucien 2018 Syndicalism In Adams Matthew S Levy Carl eds The Palgrave Handbook of Anarchism London Palgrave Macmillan pp 249 264 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 75620 2 14 ISBN 978 3319756196 S2CID 242074567 Williams Dana M 2018 Tactics Conceptions of Social Change Revolution and Anarchist Organisation In Adams Matthew S Levy Carl eds The Palgrave Handbook of Anarchism London Palgrave Macmillan pp 107 124 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 75620 2 6 ISBN 978 3319756196 S2CID 158841066 Zimmer Kenyon 2018 Haymarket and the Rise of Syndicalism In Adams Matthew S Levy Carl eds The Palgrave Handbook of Anarchism London Palgrave Macmillan pp 353 370 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 75620 2 21 ISBN 978 3319756196 S2CID 242074567 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to General strike Chronology of general strikes The Mass Strike by Rosa Luxemburg 1906 General Strike 1842 From chartists net downloaded 5 June 2006 From Reflections on Violence Strike Famous Worker Uprisings Archived 18 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine slideshow by Life magazine Strikes and You from the National Alliance for Worker and Employer Rights Seattle General Strike Project Oakland 1946 Project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title General strike amp oldid 1199489370, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.