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Murray Bookchin

Murray Bookchin (January 14, 1921 – July 30, 2006[1]) was an American social theorist, author, orator, historian, and political philosopher. Influenced by G. W. F. Hegel, Karl Marx, Peter Kropotkin,[2] he was a pioneer in the environmental movement.[3] Bookchin formulated and developed the theory of social ecology and urban planning within anarchist, libertarian socialist, and ecological thought. He was the author of two dozen books covering topics in politics, philosophy, history, urban affairs, and social ecology. Among the most important were Our Synthetic Environment (1962), Post-Scarcity Anarchism (1971), The Ecology of Freedom (1982), and Urbanization Without Cities (1987). In the late 1990s, he became disenchanted with what he saw as an increasingly apolitical "lifestylism" of the contemporary anarchist movement, stopped referring to himself as an anarchist, and founded his own libertarian socialist ideology called "communalism", which seeks to reconcile and expand Marxist, syndicalist, and anarchist thought.[4][5]

Murray Bookchin
Bookchin in 1990
BornJanuary 14, 1921
New York City, U.S.
DiedJuly 30, 2006(2006-07-30) (aged 85)
Era20th-/21st-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolContinental philosophy, anarchism, libertarian socialism, Hegelianism, philosophy of ecology
Main interests
Social hierarchy, dialectics, post-scarcity, anarchism, libertarian socialism, ethics, environmental sustainability, ecology, history of popular revolutionary movements
Notable ideas
Communalism, social ecology

Bookchin was a prominent anti-capitalist and advocate of social decentralization along ecological and democratic lines. His ideas have influenced social movements since the 1960s, including the New Left, the anti-nuclear movement, the anti-globalization movement, Occupy Wall Street, and more recently, the democratic confederalism of the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria. He was a central figure in the American green movement.

Biography edit

Bookchin was born in New York City to Russian Jewish immigrants[6][7] Nathan Bookchin and Rose (Kaluskaya) Bookchin. He grew up in the Bronx, where his grandmother, Zeitel, a Socialist Revolutionary, imbued him with Russian populist ideas. After her death in 1930, he joined the Young Pioneers of America, the Communist youth organization (for children 9 to 14)[8] and the Young Communist League (for youths) in 1935. He attended the Workers School near Union Square, where he studied Marxism. In the late 1930s he broke with Stalinism and gravitated toward Trotskyism, joining the Socialist Workers Party (SWP). In the early 1940s, he worked in a foundry in Bayonne, New Jersey, where he was a trade union organizer and shop steward for the United Electrical Workers as well as a recruiter for the SWP. Within the SWP, he adhered to the Goldman-Morrow faction, which broke away after the war ended. He was an auto worker and UAW member at the time of the great General Motors strike of 1945–46. In 1949, while speaking to a Zionist youth organization at City College, Bookchin met a mathematics student, Beatrice Appelstein, whom he married in 1951.[9] They were married for 12 years and lived together for 35, remaining close friends and political allies for the rest of his life. They had two children, Debbie and Joseph.[10] On religious views, Bookchin was an atheist, but was considered to be tolerant of religious views.[11]

From 1947, Bookchin collaborated with a fellow lapsed Trotskyist, the German expatriate Josef Weber, in New York in the Movement for a Democracy of Content, a group of 20 or so post-Trotskyists who collectively edited the periodical Contemporary Issues – A Magazine for a Democracy of Content. Contemporary Issues embraced utopianism. The periodical provided a forum for the belief that previous attempts to create utopia had foundered on the necessity of toil and drudgery; but now modern technology had obviated the need for human toil, a liberatory development. To achieve this "post-scarcity" society, Bookchin developed a theory of ecological decentralism. The magazine published Bookchin's first articles, including the pathbreaking "The Problem of Chemicals in Food" (1952). In 1958, Bookchin defined himself as an anarchist,[8] seeing parallels between anarchism and environmentalism. His first book, Our Synthetic Environment, was published under the pseudonym Lewis Herber, in 1962, a few months before Rachel Carson's famous Silent Spring.[12][13]

In 1964, Bookchin joined the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), and protested racism at the 1964 World's Fair. During 1964–1967, while living on Manhattan's Lower East Side, he cofounded and was the principal figure in the New York Federation of Anarchists. His groundbreaking essay "Ecology and Revolutionary Thought" introduced environmentalism and, more specifically, ecology as a concept in radical politics.[14] In 1968, he founded another group that published the influential Anarchos magazine, which published that and other innovative essays on post-scarcity and on sustainable technologies such as solar and wind energy, and on decentralization and miniaturization. Lecturing throughout the United States, he helped popularize the concept of ecology to the counterculture. His widely republished 1969 essay "Listen, Marxist!"[15] warned Students for a Democratic Society (in vain) against an impending takeover by a Marxist group. "Once again the dead are walking in our midst," he wrote, "ironically, draped in the name of Marx, the man who tried to bury the dead of the nineteenth century. So the revolution of our own day can do nothing better than parody, in turn, the October Revolution of 1917 and the civil war of 1918–1920, with its 'class line,' its Bolshevik Party, its 'proletarian dictatorship,' its puritanical morality, and even its slogan, 'Soviet power'".[16]

In 1969–1970, he taught at the Alternate U, a counter-cultural radical school based on 14th Street in Manhattan. In 1971, he moved to Burlington, Vermont, with a group of friends, to put into practice his ideas of decentralization. In the fall of 1973, he was hired by Goddard College to lecture on technology; his lectures led to a teaching position and to the creation of the Social Ecology Studies program in 1974 and the Institute for Social Ecology (ISE) soon thereafter, of which he became the director. In 1974, he was hired by Ramapo College in Mahwah, New Jersey, where he quickly became a full professor. The ISE was a hub for experimentation and study of appropriate technology in the 1970s. In 1977–78 he was a member of the Spruce Mountain Affinity Group of the Clamshell Alliance. Also in 1977, he published The Spanish Anarchists, a history of the Spanish anarchist movement up to the revolution of 1936. During this period, Bookchin briefly forged some ties with the nascent libertarian movement, speaking at a Libertarian Party convention and contributing to a newsletter edited by Karl Hess. Nevertheless, Bookchin rejected the types of libertarianism that advocated unconstrained individualism.[17]

In 1980, Bookchin co-established the New England Anarchist Conference (NEAC) to organize the anarchist movement in the United States. At its first meeting in October 1980, 175 anarchists from the northeastern US and Quebec attended. By the second conference in January 1981 in Somerville, Massachusetts, the NEAC devolved into sectarianism, which moved Bookchin to lose faith in a socialist revolution happening in the US.[18]

During the 1980s, Bookchin engaged in occasional critiques of Bernie Sanders' mayorship in Burlington. Bookchin criticized Sanders' politics, claiming he lacked a drive to establish direct democracy, followed a Marxian deprioritization of ecology, and was a “'centralist' who narrowly focused on economic growth."[19] Bookchin and his social ecologist colleagues in the Burlington Greens, which he co-founded, criticized the Sanders administration for pushing for a luxury condo waterfront redevelopment, which was eventually rejected by Burlington voters. They advocated for a moratorium on growth, a moral economy, and social justice rooted in grassroots democracy.[20]

In 1988, Bookchin and Howie Hawkins founded the Left Green Network "as a radical alternative to U.S. Green liberals", based around the principles of social ecology and libertarian municipalism.[21]

In 1995, Bookchin lamented the decline of American anarchism into primitivism, anti-technologism, neo-Situationism, individual self-expression, and "ad hoc adventurism," at the expense of forming a social movement. He formally broke with anarchism in 1999, describing himself in 2002 as a "Communalist" in a major essay elaborating his late-life views, called "The Communalist Project".

He continued to teach at the ISE until 2004. Bookchin died of congestive heart failure on July 30, 2006, at his home in Burlington, at the age of 85.[22]

Thought edit

In addition to his political writings, Bookchin wrote extensively on philosophy, calling his ideas dialectical naturalism.[2]: 31  The dialectical writings of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, which articulate a developmental philosophy of change and growth, seemed to him to lend themselves to an organic, environmentalist approach.[2]: 96–97  Although Hegel "exercised a considerable influence" on Bookchin, he was not, in any sense, a Hegelian.[23] His philosophical writings emphasize humanism, rationality, and the ideals of the Enlightenment.[24][25]

Bookchin does not clearly define many of the key terms of his philosophy.[26]

General sociological and psychological views edit

Bookchin was critical of class-centered analysis of Marxism and simplistic anti-state forms of libertarianism and liberalism and wished to present what he saw as a more complex view of societies. In The Ecology of Freedom: The Emergence and Dissolution of Hierarchy, he says that:

My use of the word hierarchy in the subtitle of this work is meant to be provocative. There is a strong theoretical need to contrast hierarchy with the more widespread use of the words class and State; careless use of these terms can produce a dangerous simplification of social reality. To use the words hierarchy, class, and State interchangeably, as many social theorists do, is insidious and obscurantist. This practice, in the name of a "classless" or "libertarian" society, could easily conceal the existence of hierarchical relationships and a hierarchical sensibility, both of which—even in the absence of economic exploitation or political coercion—would serve to perpetuate unfreedom.[27]

Bookchin also points to an accumulation of hierarchical systems throughout history that has occurred up to contemporary societies which tends to determine the human collective and individual psyche:

The objective history of the social structure becomes internalized as a subjective history of the psychic structure. Heinous as my view may be to modern Freudians, it is not the discipline of work but the discipline of rule that demands the repression of internal nature. This repression then extends outward to external nature as a mere object of rule and later of exploitation. This mentality permeates our individual psyches in a cumulative form up to the present day-not merely as capitalism but as the vast history of hierarchical society from its inception.[28]

Humanity's environmental predicament edit

Bookchin's book about humanity's collision course with the natural world, Our Synthetic Environment, was published six months before Rachel Carson's Silent Spring.[29]

Bookchin rejected Barry Commoner's belief that the environmental crisis could be traced to technological choices, Paul Ehrlich's views that it could be traced to overpopulation, or the even more pessimistic view that traces this crisis to human nature. Rather, Bookchin felt that our environmental predicament is the result of the cancerous logic of capitalism, a system aimed at maximizing profit instead of enriching human lives: "By the very logic of its grow-or-die imperative, capitalism may well be producing ecological crises that gravely imperil the integrity of life on this planet."

The solution to this crisis, he said, is not a return to hunter-gatherer societies, which Bookchin characterized as xenophobic and warlike. Bookchin likewise opposed "a politics of mere protest, lacking programmatic content, a proposed alternative, and a movement to give people direction and continuity."[29] He claims we need:

...a constant awareness that a given society's irrationality is deep-seated, that its serious pathologies are not isolated problems that can be cured piecemeal but must be solved by sweeping changes in the often hidden sources of crisis and suffering—that awareness alone is what can hold a movement together, give it continuity, preserve its message and organization beyond a given generation, and expand its ability to deal with new issues and developments.[29]

The answer then lies in Communalism, a system encompassing a directly democratic political organization anchored in loosely confederated popular assemblies, decentralization of power, absence of domination of any kind, and replacing capitalism with human-centered forms of production.[29]

Social ecology edit

Social ecology is a philosophical theory associated with Bookchin, concerned with the relationship between ecological and social issues.[30][31] It is not a movement but a theory primarily associated with his thought and elaborated over his body of work.[32] He presents a utopian philosophy of human evolution that combines the nature of biology and society into a third "thinking nature" beyond biochemistry and physiology, which he argues is a more complete, conscious, ethical, and rational nature. Humanity, by this line of thought, is the latest development from the long history of organic development on Earth. Bookchin's social ecology proposes ethical principles for replacing a society's propensity for hierarchy and domination with that of democracy and freedom.[33]

It emerged from a time in the mid-1960s, under the emergence of both the global environmental and the American civil rights movements, and played a much more visible role from the upward movement against nuclear power by the late 1970s.[34] It presents ecological problems as arising mainly from social problems, in particular from different forms of hierarchy and domination, and seeks to resolve them through the model of a society adapted to human development and the biosphere.[35] It is a theory of radical political ecology based on communalism, which opposes the current capitalist system of production and consumption.[36] It aims to set up a moral, decentralized, united society, guided by reason.[37] While Bookchin distanced himself from anarchism later in his life, the philosophical theory of social ecology is often considered to be a form of eco-anarchism.[38]

Bookchin wrote about the effects of urbanization on human life in the early 1960s during his participation in the civil rights and related social movements. He then began to pursue the connection between ecological and social issues, culminating with his best-known book, The Ecology of Freedom, which he had developed over a decade.[39] His argument, that human domination and destruction of nature follows from social domination between humans, was a breakthrough position in the growing field of ecology. He writes that life develops from self-organization and evolutionary cooperation (symbiosis).[35] Bookchin wrote of preliterate societies organized around mutual need but ultimately overrun by institutions of hierarchy and domination, such as city-states and capitalist economies, which he attributes uniquely to societies of humans and not communities of animals.[36] He proposes confederation between communities of humans run through democracy rather than through administrative logistics.[37]

Bookchin's work, beginning with anarchist writings on the subject in the 1960s, has continuously evolved. Towards the end of the 1990s, he increasingly integrated the principle of communalism, with aspirations more inclined towards institutionalized municipal democracy, which distanced him from certain evolutions of anarchism. Bookchin's work draws inspiration from, and expands up, anarchism (mainly Kropotkin), Syndicalism, and Marxism (including the writings of Marx and Engels). Social ecology refuses the pitfalls of a Neo-Malthusian ecology which erases social relationships by replacing them with "natural forces", but also of a technocratic ecology which considers that environmental progress must rely on technological breakthroughs and that the state will play an integral role in this technological development. According to Bookchin, these two currents depoliticize ecology and mythologize the past and the future.[30]

In May 2016, the first "International Social Ecology Meetings" were organized in Lyon, which brought together a hundred radical environmentalists, decreasing figures and libertarians, most of whom came from France, Belgium, Spain and Switzerland, but also from the United States, Guatemala and Canada. At the center of the debates: libertarian municipalism as an alternative to the nation state and the need to rethink activism.[40][41][42]

Kurdish movement edit

Bookchin's reflections on social ecology and libertarian municipalism also inspired Abdullah Öcalan, the historical leader of the Kurdish movement, to create the concept of democratic confederalism, which aims to bring together the peoples of the Middle East in a confederation of democratic, multicultural and ecological communes.[43][44] Adopted by the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) since 2005, Öcalan's project represents a major ideological shift away from their previous goal of establishing a Marxist–Leninist state.[43][45][46] In addition to the PKK, Öcalan's internationalist project was also well received by its Syrian counterpart, the Party of Democratic Union (PYD), which would become the first organization in the world to actually found a society based on the principles of democratic confederalism.[47][48][49] On January 6, 2014, the cantons of Rojava, in Syrian Kurdistan, federated into autonomous municipalities, adopting a social contract which established a decentralized non-hierarchy society, based on principles of direct democracy, feminism, ecology, cultural pluralism, participatory politics and economic cooperativism.[45][46][50]

Municipalism and communalism edit

Bookchin's vision of an ecological society is based on highly participatory, grassroots politics, in which municipal communities democratically plan and manage their affairs through popular assembly, a program he called Communalism. This democratic deliberation purposefully promotes autonomy and self-reliance, as opposed to centralized state politics. While this program retains elements of anarchism, it emphasizes a higher degree of organization (community planning, voting, and institutions) than general anarchism. In Bookchin's Communalism, these autonomous, municipal communities connect with each other via confederations.[51]

Starting in the 1970s, Bookchin argued that the arena for libertarian social change should be the municipal level. In 1980 Bookchin used the term "libertarian municipalism" to describe a libertarian socialist[52] system in which institutions of directly democratic assemblies would oppose and replace the state with a confederation of free municipalities.[53] In The Next Revolution, Bookchin stresses the link that libertarian municipalism has with his earlier philosophy of social ecology. He writes:

Libertarian Municipalism constitutes the politics of social ecology, a revolutionary effort in which freedom is given institutional form in public assemblies that become decision-making bodies.[54]

Bookchin proposes that these institutional forms must take place within differently scaled local areas. In a 2001 interview he summarized his views this way:

The overriding problem is to change the structure of society so that people gain power. The best arena to do that is the municipality—the city, town, and village—where we have an opportunity to create a face-to-face democracy.[55]

Libertarian municipalism intends to create a situation in which the two powers—the municipal confederations and the nation state cannot coexist.[55]

Legacy and influence edit

Though Bookchin, by his own recognition, failed to win over a substantial body of supporters during his own lifetime, his ideas have nonetheless influenced movements and thinkers across the globe.

Among these are the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) and closely aligned Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) in Turkey, which have fought the Turkish state since the 1980s to try to secure greater political and cultural rights for the country's Kurds. The PKK is designated as a terrorist organization by the Turkish and United States governments, while the YPG has been considered an ally of the US against ISIS.[56][57] Though founded on a rigid Marxist–Leninist ideology, the PKK has seen a shift in its thought and aims since the capture and imprisonment of its leader, Abdullah Öcalan, in 1999. Öcalan began reading a variety of post-Marxist political theory while in prison, and found particular interest in Bookchin's works.[58][59]

Öcalan attempted in early 2004 to arrange a meeting with Bookchin through his lawyers, describing himself as Bookchin's "student" eager to adapt his thought to Middle Eastern society. Bookchin was too ill to accept the request. In May 2004 Bookchin conveyed this message "My hope is that the Kurdish people will one day be able to establish a free, rational society that will allow their brilliance once again to flourish. They are fortunate indeed to have a leader of Mr. Öcalan's talents to guide them". When Bookchin died in 2006, the PKK hailed the American thinker as "one of the greatest social scientists of the 20th century", and vowed to put his theory into practice.[58]

His ideas, particularly those related to social ecology and libertarian municipalism, have influenced the Zapatistas and their approach to autonomy and self-governance.[60] The Zapatistas, who rose to prominence in 1994, developed their autonomous government structure, which includes grassroots democracy, inspired by their experiences and the communal traditions of the indigenous population. While Bookchin's influence is more directly associated with the Kurdish movement in Rojava, the principles of decentralization, direct democracy, and the rejection of hierarchical structures align with some of the core ideas he promoted.[61]

"Democratic confederalism", the variation on Communalism developed by Öcalan in his writings and adopted by the PKK, does not outwardly seek Kurdish rights within the context of the formation of an independent state separate from Turkey. The PKK claims that this project is not envisioned as being only for Kurds, but rather for all peoples of the region, regardless of their ethnic, national, or religious background. Rather, it promulgates the formation of assemblies and organizations beginning at the grassroots level to enact its ideals in a non-state framework beginning at the local level. It also places a particular emphasis on securing and promoting women's rights.[58] The PKK has had some success in implementing its programme, through organizations such as the Democratic Society Congress (DTK), which coordinates political and social activities within Turkey, and the Koma Civakên Kurdistan (KCK), which does so across all countries where Kurds live.[62]

Selected works edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Small, Mike (August 8, 2006). "Murray Bookchin" (Obituary). The Guardian. from the original on July 16, 2022. Retrieved June 30, 2018.
  2. ^ a b c Bookchin, Murray (January 2005). The Ecology of Freedom; The Emergence and Dissolution of Hierarchy. Chico, CA: AK Press. pp. 8, 11. ISBN 978-1904859260. from the original on April 25, 2022. Retrieved June 30, 2018.
  3. ^ John Muir Institute for Environmental Studies, University of New Mexico, Environmental Philosophy, Inc, University of Georgia, Environmental Ethics v. 12 1990: 193.
  4. ^ Bookchin, Murray. "The Future of the Left," The Next Revolution: Popular Assemblies and the Promise of Direct Democracy. New York: Verso Books, 2015. pp. 157–158.
  5. ^ Biehl, Janet. "Bookchin Breaks with Anarchism Communalism October 2007: 1". theanarchistlibrary.org. from the original on July 30, 2020. Retrieved May 25, 2023.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on October 14, 2007.
  7. ^ "The Murray Bookchin Reader: Intro". Dwardmac.pitzer.edu. from the original on September 6, 2011. Retrieved May 11, 2012.
  8. ^ a b "Anarchism in America documentary". YouTube. January 9, 2007. Archived from the original on November 14, 2021. Retrieved May 11, 2012.
  9. ^ Price, Andy. The Independent "Murray Bookchin, Political philosopher and activist who became a founder of the ecological movement" August 19, 2006". The Independent. London. August 19, 2006. Archived from the original on June 18, 2022. Retrieved November 11, 2012.
  10. ^ Martin, Douglas (August 7, 2006). "Murray Bookchin, 85, writer, Activist and Ecology Theorist Dies August 7, 2006". The New York Times. from the original on May 31, 2015. Retrieved November 11, 2012.
  11. ^ Light 1998, p. 27.
  12. ^ Paull, John (2013) "The Rachel Carson Letters and the Making of Silent Spring" November 3, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, Sage Open, 3(July):1–12.
  13. ^ "A Short Biography of Murray Bookchin by Janet Biehl". Dwardmac.pitzer.edu. from the original on August 7, 2020. Retrieved May 11, 2012.
  14. ^ "Ecology and Revolution". Dwardmac.pitzer.edu. June 16, 2004. from the original on August 29, 2020. Retrieved May 11, 2012.
  15. ^ "Listen, Marxist!". Nasalam.org. from the original on August 29, 2020. Retrieved May 11, 2012.
  16. ^ Walker, Jesse (July 31, 2006) Murray Bookchin, RIP October 12, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, Reason
  17. ^ "Reflections: Murray Bookchin". dwardmac.pitzer.edu. from the original on October 15, 2018. Retrieved October 16, 2019.
  18. ^ Biehl, Janet (2015). Ecology or catastrophe: the life of Murray Bookchin. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-934248-8.
  19. ^ Rossi, Marco Rosaire (April 3, 2022). "The Sanders-Bookchin Debate". Capitalism Nature Socialism. 33 (2): 120–138. doi:10.1080/10455752.2022.2051058. ISSN 1045-5752. S2CID 247404346. from the original on June 27, 2023. Retrieved June 27, 2023.
  20. ^ Vote Green leaflet https://www.scribd.com/doc/229304919/Vote-Bea Retrieved February 24, 2024
  21. ^ Biehl, Janet (March 22, 2015). "The Left Green Network (1988–91)". Ecology or Catastrophe. from the original on March 25, 2015. Retrieved November 16, 2019.
  22. ^ Martin, Douglas (August 7, 2006). "Murray Bookchin, visionary social theorist, dies at 85". The New York Times. from the original on October 1, 2018. Retrieved February 22, 2017.
  23. ^ Bookchin, Murray (1996). The Philosophy of Social Ecology: Essays on Dialectical Naturalism. Montreal: Black Rose Books. p. x.
  24. ^ Bookchin, Murray (1982). The Ecology of Freedom. US: Cheshire Books. p. 20.
  25. ^ See Re-Enchanting Humanity, London: Cassell, 1995, amongst other works.
  26. ^ Curran 2007, p. 174.
  27. ^ Murray Bookchin. The Ecology of Freedom: the emergence and dissolution of Hierarchy. Cheshire Books: Palo Alto. 1982. p. 3 [ISBN missing]
  28. ^ Murray Bookchin. The Ecology of Freedom: the emergence and dissolution of Hierarchy. Cheshire Books: Palo Alto. 1982. p. 8 [ISBN missing]
  29. ^ a b c d Bookchin, Murray (2015). Bookchin, Debbie; Taylor, Blair (eds.). The next revolution: Popular assemblies and the promise of direct democracy (with a foreword by Ursula K. Le Guin). London: Verso Books. ISBN 978-1781685815.
  30. ^ a b Bookchin, Murray (2006). Social Ecology and Communalism (PDF). AK Press. ISBN 978-1-904859-49-9. (PDF) from the original on November 24, 2020. Retrieved February 23, 2023.
  31. ^ Bookchin, Murray (2007). "What is Social Ecology?" (PDF). psichenatura.it. (PDF) from the original on December 27, 2015. Retrieved February 23, 2023.
  32. ^ Light 1998, p. 5.
  33. ^ Stokols, Daniel (2018). Social Ecology in the Digital Age: Solving Complex Problems in a Globalized World. Elsevier Science. p. 33. ISBN 978-0-12-803114-8. from the original on September 21, 2023. Retrieved July 22, 2018 – via Google Books.
  34. ^ "On Bookchin's Social Ecology and its Contributions to Social Movements". social-ecology.org. 2018. from the original on September 29, 2017. Retrieved February 23, 2023.
  35. ^ a b Light 1998, p. 6.
  36. ^ a b Light 1998, p. 7.
  37. ^ a b Light 1998, p. 8.
  38. ^ McKay, Iain. An Anarchist FAQ. AK Press: Oakland. 2008. pp. 65.[ISBN missing]
  39. ^ Light 1998, pp. 5–6.
  40. ^ "Questions pour un autre futur" [Questions for another future] (in French). Le Courrier. July 25, 2016. from the original on May 27, 2017. Retrieved February 23, 2023.
  41. ^ "Rencontres Internationales de l'Écologie Sociale – 27 28 et 29 mai 2016 Lyon" [International Meetings of Social Ecology – 27 28 and 29 May 2016, Lyon] (in French). Passerelle éco. March 16, 2016. from the original on February 23, 2023. Retrieved February 23, 2023.
  42. ^ Tokar, Brian (2010). "Bookchin's Social Ecology and its Contributions to the Red-Green Movement". In Huan, Qingzhi (ed.). Eco-socialism as Politics: Rebuilding the Basis of Our Modern Civilisation. Springer Science+Business Media. pp. 123–140 [123–127]. doi:10.1007/978-90-481-3745-9_8. ISBN 978-90-481-3745-9.
  43. ^ a b Bookchin, Debbie (June 15, 2018). "How My Father's Ideas Helped the Kurds Create a New Democracy". The New York Review of Books. from the original on September 1, 2020. Retrieved May 20, 2016.
  44. ^ Fernandez, Benjamin (July 2016). "Murray Bookchin, écologie ou barbarie" [Murray Bookchin, ecology or barbarism] (in French). Le Monde diplomatique. from the original on November 17, 2016. Retrieved February 23, 2023.
  45. ^ a b "A Dream of Secular Utopia in ISIS' Backyard". The New York Times. November 24, 2015. from the original on December 8, 2016. Retrieved July 1, 2020.
  46. ^ a b Shilton, Dor (June 9, 2019). "In the Heart of Syria's Darkness, a Democratic, Egalitarian and Feminist Society Emerges". Haaretz. from the original on July 2, 2020. Retrieved July 2, 2020.
  47. ^ Malik, Kenan (October 27, 2019). "Syria's Kurds dreamt of a 'Rojava revolution'. Assad will snuff this out". The Guardian. from the original on May 25, 2020. Retrieved July 2, 2020.
  48. ^ "Revolution in Rojava Democratic Autonomy and Women's Liberation in Syrian Kurdistan". Pluto Books. from the original on June 22, 2020. Retrieved July 2, 2020.
  49. ^ Krajeski, Jenna (October 14, 2019). "What the World Loses if Turkey Destroys the Syrian Kurds". The New York Times. from the original on July 3, 2020. Retrieved July 2, 2020.
  50. ^ Baird, Vanessa (June 22, 2020). "In the Autonomous Zones". The New International. from the original on July 1, 2020. Retrieved July 2, 2020.
  51. ^ Bookchin, Murray. Free Cities: Communalism and the Left. from the original on April 25, 2022. Retrieved March 18, 2022.
  52. ^ Taylor, Rafael (March 22, 2016). "The New PKK: unleashing a social revolution in Kurdistan". Co-operation in Mesopotamia. from the original on July 24, 2023. Retrieved July 24, 2023.
  53. ^ Bookchin, M. (October 1991). "Libertarian Municipalism: An Overview". Green Perspectives. No. 24. Burlington, VT.
  54. ^ Bookchin, Murray (2015). The Next Revolution. London: Verso Press. p. 96. ISBN 9781781685822.
  55. ^ a b Bookchin, Murray; Vanek, David (October 1, 2001). "Interview with Murray Bookchin". Harbinger, a Journal of Social Ecology. Vol. 2, no. 1. Institute for Social Ecology.
  56. ^ Bookchin, Debbie (June 15, 2018). "How My Father's Ideas Helped the Kurds Create a New Democracy". The New York Review of Books. from the original on September 1, 2020. Retrieved October 23, 2019.
  57. ^ Barnard, Anne; Hubbard, Ben (January 25, 2018). "Allies or Terrorists: Who Are the Kurdish Fighters in Syria?". The New York Times. from the original on September 1, 2020. Retrieved October 23, 2019.
  58. ^ a b c Biehl, Janet (February 16, 2012). "Bookchin, Öcalan, and the Dialectics of Democracy". New Compass. from the original on April 1, 2016. Retrieved January 27, 2014.
  59. ^ de Jong, Alex (March 2016). "The New–Old PKK". Jacobin. from the original on April 28, 2016. Retrieved March 29, 2016.
  60. ^ "From Chiapas to Rojava: The Rise of a New Revolutionary Paradigm". Hampton Institute. February 26, 2016. Retrieved October 27, 2023.
  61. ^ "The ghost of anarcho-syndicalism – Murray Bookchin". libcom.org. Retrieved October 27, 2023.
  62. ^ Biehl, Janet (October 9, 2011). "Kurdish Communalism". New Compass. from the original on September 1, 2020. Retrieved January 27, 2014.

Bibliography edit

Further reading edit

External links edit

murray, bookchin, bookchin, redirects, here, artist, natalie, bookchin, january, 1921, july, 2006, american, social, theorist, author, orator, historian, political, philosopher, influenced, hegel, karl, marx, peter, kropotkin, pioneer, environmental, movement,. Bookchin redirects here For the artist see Natalie Bookchin Murray Bookchin January 14 1921 July 30 2006 1 was an American social theorist author orator historian and political philosopher Influenced by G W F Hegel Karl Marx Peter Kropotkin 2 he was a pioneer in the environmental movement 3 Bookchin formulated and developed the theory of social ecology and urban planning within anarchist libertarian socialist and ecological thought He was the author of two dozen books covering topics in politics philosophy history urban affairs and social ecology Among the most important were Our Synthetic Environment 1962 Post Scarcity Anarchism 1971 The Ecology of Freedom 1982 and Urbanization Without Cities 1987 In the late 1990s he became disenchanted with what he saw as an increasingly apolitical lifestylism of the contemporary anarchist movement stopped referring to himself as an anarchist and founded his own libertarian socialist ideology called communalism which seeks to reconcile and expand Marxist syndicalist and anarchist thought 4 5 Murray BookchinBookchin in 1990BornJanuary 14 1921New York City U S DiedJuly 30 2006 2006 07 30 aged 85 Burlington Vermont U S Era20th 21st century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolContinental philosophy anarchism libertarian socialism Hegelianism philosophy of ecologyMain interestsSocial hierarchy dialectics post scarcity anarchism libertarian socialism ethics environmental sustainability ecology history of popular revolutionary movementsNotable ideasCommunalism social ecology Bookchin was a prominent anti capitalist and advocate of social decentralization along ecological and democratic lines His ideas have influenced social movements since the 1960s including the New Left the anti nuclear movement the anti globalization movement Occupy Wall Street and more recently the democratic confederalism of the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria He was a central figure in the American green movement Contents 1 Biography 2 Thought 2 1 General sociological and psychological views 2 2 Humanity s environmental predicament 2 3 Social ecology 2 3 1 Kurdish movement 2 4 Municipalism and communalism 3 Legacy and influence 4 Selected works 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 Further reading 9 External linksBiography editBookchin was born in New York City to Russian Jewish immigrants 6 7 Nathan Bookchin and Rose Kaluskaya Bookchin He grew up in the Bronx where his grandmother Zeitel a Socialist Revolutionary imbued him with Russian populist ideas After her death in 1930 he joined the Young Pioneers of America the Communist youth organization for children 9 to 14 8 and the Young Communist League for youths in 1935 He attended the Workers School near Union Square where he studied Marxism In the late 1930s he broke with Stalinism and gravitated toward Trotskyism joining the Socialist Workers Party SWP In the early 1940s he worked in a foundry in Bayonne New Jersey where he was a trade union organizer and shop steward for the United Electrical Workers as well as a recruiter for the SWP Within the SWP he adhered to the Goldman Morrow faction which broke away after the war ended He was an auto worker and UAW member at the time of the great General Motors strike of 1945 46 In 1949 while speaking to a Zionist youth organization at City College Bookchin met a mathematics student Beatrice Appelstein whom he married in 1951 9 They were married for 12 years and lived together for 35 remaining close friends and political allies for the rest of his life They had two children Debbie and Joseph 10 On religious views Bookchin was an atheist but was considered to be tolerant of religious views 11 From 1947 Bookchin collaborated with a fellow lapsed Trotskyist the German expatriate Josef Weber in New York in the Movement for a Democracy of Content a group of 20 or so post Trotskyists who collectively edited the periodical Contemporary Issues A Magazine for a Democracy of Content Contemporary Issues embraced utopianism The periodical provided a forum for the belief that previous attempts to create utopia had foundered on the necessity of toil and drudgery but now modern technology had obviated the need for human toil a liberatory development To achieve this post scarcity society Bookchin developed a theory of ecological decentralism The magazine published Bookchin s first articles including the pathbreaking The Problem of Chemicals in Food 1952 In 1958 Bookchin defined himself as an anarchist 8 seeing parallels between anarchism and environmentalism His first book Our Synthetic Environment was published under the pseudonym Lewis Herber in 1962 a few months before Rachel Carson s famous Silent Spring 12 13 In 1964 Bookchin joined the Congress of Racial Equality CORE and protested racism at the 1964 World s Fair During 1964 1967 while living on Manhattan s Lower East Side he cofounded and was the principal figure in the New York Federation of Anarchists His groundbreaking essay Ecology and Revolutionary Thought introduced environmentalism and more specifically ecology as a concept in radical politics 14 In 1968 he founded another group that published the influential Anarchos magazine which published that and other innovative essays on post scarcity and on sustainable technologies such as solar and wind energy and on decentralization and miniaturization Lecturing throughout the United States he helped popularize the concept of ecology to the counterculture His widely republished 1969 essay Listen Marxist 15 warned Students for a Democratic Society in vain against an impending takeover by a Marxist group Once again the dead are walking in our midst he wrote ironically draped in the name of Marx the man who tried to bury the dead of the nineteenth century So the revolution of our own day can do nothing better than parody in turn the October Revolution of 1917 and the civil war of 1918 1920 with its class line its Bolshevik Party its proletarian dictatorship its puritanical morality and even its slogan Soviet power 16 In 1969 1970 he taught at the Alternate U a counter cultural radical school based on 14th Street in Manhattan In 1971 he moved to Burlington Vermont with a group of friends to put into practice his ideas of decentralization In the fall of 1973 he was hired by Goddard College to lecture on technology his lectures led to a teaching position and to the creation of the Social Ecology Studies program in 1974 and the Institute for Social Ecology ISE soon thereafter of which he became the director In 1974 he was hired by Ramapo College in Mahwah New Jersey where he quickly became a full professor The ISE was a hub for experimentation and study of appropriate technology in the 1970s In 1977 78 he was a member of the Spruce Mountain Affinity Group of the Clamshell Alliance Also in 1977 he published The Spanish Anarchists a history of the Spanish anarchist movement up to the revolution of 1936 During this period Bookchin briefly forged some ties with the nascent libertarian movement speaking at a Libertarian Party convention and contributing to a newsletter edited by Karl Hess Nevertheless Bookchin rejected the types of libertarianism that advocated unconstrained individualism 17 In 1980 Bookchin co established the New England Anarchist Conference NEAC to organize the anarchist movement in the United States At its first meeting in October 1980 175 anarchists from the northeastern US and Quebec attended By the second conference in January 1981 in Somerville Massachusetts the NEAC devolved into sectarianism which moved Bookchin to lose faith in a socialist revolution happening in the US 18 During the 1980s Bookchin engaged in occasional critiques of Bernie Sanders mayorship in Burlington Bookchin criticized Sanders politics claiming he lacked a drive to establish direct democracy followed a Marxian deprioritization of ecology and was a centralist who narrowly focused on economic growth 19 Bookchin and his social ecologist colleagues in the Burlington Greens which he co founded criticized the Sanders administration for pushing for a luxury condo waterfront redevelopment which was eventually rejected by Burlington voters They advocated for a moratorium on growth a moral economy and social justice rooted in grassroots democracy 20 In 1988 Bookchin and Howie Hawkins founded the Left Green Network as a radical alternative to U S Green liberals based around the principles of social ecology and libertarian municipalism 21 In 1995 Bookchin lamented the decline of American anarchism into primitivism anti technologism neo Situationism individual self expression and ad hoc adventurism at the expense of forming a social movement He formally broke with anarchism in 1999 describing himself in 2002 as a Communalist in a major essay elaborating his late life views called The Communalist Project He continued to teach at the ISE until 2004 Bookchin died of congestive heart failure on July 30 2006 at his home in Burlington at the age of 85 22 Thought editIn addition to his political writings Bookchin wrote extensively on philosophy calling his ideas dialectical naturalism 2 31 The dialectical writings of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel which articulate a developmental philosophy of change and growth seemed to him to lend themselves to an organic environmentalist approach 2 96 97 Although Hegel exercised a considerable influence on Bookchin he was not in any sense a Hegelian 23 His philosophical writings emphasize humanism rationality and the ideals of the Enlightenment 24 25 Bookchin does not clearly define many of the key terms of his philosophy 26 General sociological and psychological views edit Bookchin was critical of class centered analysis of Marxism and simplistic anti state forms of libertarianism and liberalism and wished to present what he saw as a more complex view of societies In The Ecology of Freedom The Emergence and Dissolution of Hierarchy he says that My use of the word hierarchy in the subtitle of this work is meant to be provocative There is a strong theoretical need to contrast hierarchy with the more widespread use of the words class and State careless use of these terms can produce a dangerous simplification of social reality To use the words hierarchy class and State interchangeably as many social theorists do is insidious and obscurantist This practice in the name of a classless or libertarian society could easily conceal the existence of hierarchical relationships and a hierarchical sensibility both of which even in the absence of economic exploitation or political coercion would serve to perpetuate unfreedom 27 Bookchin also points to an accumulation of hierarchical systems throughout history that has occurred up to contemporary societies which tends to determine the human collective and individual psyche The objective history of the social structure becomes internalized as a subjective history of the psychic structure Heinous as my view may be to modern Freudians it is not the discipline of work but the discipline of rule that demands the repression of internal nature This repression then extends outward to external nature as a mere object of rule and later of exploitation This mentality permeates our individual psyches in a cumulative form up to the present day not merely as capitalism but as the vast history of hierarchical society from its inception 28 Humanity s environmental predicament edit Bookchin s book about humanity s collision course with the natural world Our Synthetic Environment was published six months before Rachel Carson s Silent Spring 29 Bookchin rejected Barry Commoner s belief that the environmental crisis could be traced to technological choices Paul Ehrlich s views that it could be traced to overpopulation or the even more pessimistic view that traces this crisis to human nature Rather Bookchin felt that our environmental predicament is the result of the cancerous logic of capitalism a system aimed at maximizing profit instead of enriching human lives By the very logic of its grow or die imperative capitalism may well be producing ecological crises that gravely imperil the integrity of life on this planet The solution to this crisis he said is not a return to hunter gatherer societies which Bookchin characterized as xenophobic and warlike Bookchin likewise opposed a politics of mere protest lacking programmatic content a proposed alternative and a movement to give people direction and continuity 29 He claims we need a constant awareness that a given society s irrationality is deep seated that its serious pathologies are not isolated problems that can be cured piecemeal but must be solved by sweeping changes in the often hidden sources of crisis and suffering that awareness alone is what can hold a movement together give it continuity preserve its message and organization beyond a given generation and expand its ability to deal with new issues and developments 29 The answer then lies in Communalism a system encompassing a directly democratic political organization anchored in loosely confederated popular assemblies decentralization of power absence of domination of any kind and replacing capitalism with human centered forms of production 29 Social ecology edit See also Social ecology Social ecology is a philosophical theory associated with Bookchin concerned with the relationship between ecological and social issues 30 31 It is not a movement but a theory primarily associated with his thought and elaborated over his body of work 32 He presents a utopian philosophy of human evolution that combines the nature of biology and society into a third thinking nature beyond biochemistry and physiology which he argues is a more complete conscious ethical and rational nature Humanity by this line of thought is the latest development from the long history of organic development on Earth Bookchin s social ecology proposes ethical principles for replacing a society s propensity for hierarchy and domination with that of democracy and freedom 33 It emerged from a time in the mid 1960s under the emergence of both the global environmental and the American civil rights movements and played a much more visible role from the upward movement against nuclear power by the late 1970s 34 It presents ecological problems as arising mainly from social problems in particular from different forms of hierarchy and domination and seeks to resolve them through the model of a society adapted to human development and the biosphere 35 It is a theory of radical political ecology based on communalism which opposes the current capitalist system of production and consumption 36 It aims to set up a moral decentralized united society guided by reason 37 While Bookchin distanced himself from anarchism later in his life the philosophical theory of social ecology is often considered to be a form of eco anarchism 38 Bookchin wrote about the effects of urbanization on human life in the early 1960s during his participation in the civil rights and related social movements He then began to pursue the connection between ecological and social issues culminating with his best known book The Ecology of Freedom which he had developed over a decade 39 His argument that human domination and destruction of nature follows from social domination between humans was a breakthrough position in the growing field of ecology He writes that life develops from self organization and evolutionary cooperation symbiosis 35 Bookchin wrote of preliterate societies organized around mutual need but ultimately overrun by institutions of hierarchy and domination such as city states and capitalist economies which he attributes uniquely to societies of humans and not communities of animals 36 He proposes confederation between communities of humans run through democracy rather than through administrative logistics 37 Bookchin s work beginning with anarchist writings on the subject in the 1960s has continuously evolved Towards the end of the 1990s he increasingly integrated the principle of communalism with aspirations more inclined towards institutionalized municipal democracy which distanced him from certain evolutions of anarchism Bookchin s work draws inspiration from and expands up anarchism mainly Kropotkin Syndicalism and Marxism including the writings of Marx and Engels Social ecology refuses the pitfalls of a Neo Malthusian ecology which erases social relationships by replacing them with natural forces but also of a technocratic ecology which considers that environmental progress must rely on technological breakthroughs and that the state will play an integral role in this technological development According to Bookchin these two currents depoliticize ecology and mythologize the past and the future 30 In May 2016 the first International Social Ecology Meetings were organized in Lyon which brought together a hundred radical environmentalists decreasing figures and libertarians most of whom came from France Belgium Spain and Switzerland but also from the United States Guatemala and Canada At the center of the debates libertarian municipalism as an alternative to the nation state and the need to rethink activism 40 41 42 Kurdish movement edit Bookchin s reflections on social ecology and libertarian municipalism also inspired Abdullah Ocalan the historical leader of the Kurdish movement to create the concept of democratic confederalism which aims to bring together the peoples of the Middle East in a confederation of democratic multicultural and ecological communes 43 44 Adopted by the Kurdistan Workers Party PKK since 2005 Ocalan s project represents a major ideological shift away from their previous goal of establishing a Marxist Leninist state 43 45 46 In addition to the PKK Ocalan s internationalist project was also well received by its Syrian counterpart the Party of Democratic Union PYD which would become the first organization in the world to actually found a society based on the principles of democratic confederalism 47 48 49 On January 6 2014 the cantons of Rojava in Syrian Kurdistan federated into autonomous municipalities adopting a social contract which established a decentralized non hierarchy society based on principles of direct democracy feminism ecology cultural pluralism participatory politics and economic cooperativism 45 46 50 Municipalism and communalism edit Bookchin s vision of an ecological society is based on highly participatory grassroots politics in which municipal communities democratically plan and manage their affairs through popular assembly a program he called Communalism This democratic deliberation purposefully promotes autonomy and self reliance as opposed to centralized state politics While this program retains elements of anarchism it emphasizes a higher degree of organization community planning voting and institutions than general anarchism In Bookchin s Communalism these autonomous municipal communities connect with each other via confederations 51 Starting in the 1970s Bookchin argued that the arena for libertarian social change should be the municipal level In 1980 Bookchin used the term libertarian municipalism to describe a libertarian socialist 52 system in which institutions of directly democratic assemblies would oppose and replace the state with a confederation of free municipalities 53 In The Next Revolution Bookchin stresses the link that libertarian municipalism has with his earlier philosophy of social ecology He writes Libertarian Municipalism constitutes the politics of social ecology a revolutionary effort in which freedom is given institutional form in public assemblies that become decision making bodies 54 Bookchin proposes that these institutional forms must take place within differently scaled local areas In a 2001 interview he summarized his views this way The overriding problem is to change the structure of society so that people gain power The best arena to do that is the municipality the city town and village where we have an opportunity to create a face to face democracy 55 Libertarian municipalism intends to create a situation in which the two powers the municipal confederations and the nation state cannot coexist 55 Legacy and influence editThough Bookchin by his own recognition failed to win over a substantial body of supporters during his own lifetime his ideas have nonetheless influenced movements and thinkers across the globe Among these are the Kurdish People s Protection Units YPG and closely aligned Kurdistan Workers Party PKK in Turkey which have fought the Turkish state since the 1980s to try to secure greater political and cultural rights for the country s Kurds The PKK is designated as a terrorist organization by the Turkish and United States governments while the YPG has been considered an ally of the US against ISIS 56 57 Though founded on a rigid Marxist Leninist ideology the PKK has seen a shift in its thought and aims since the capture and imprisonment of its leader Abdullah Ocalan in 1999 Ocalan began reading a variety of post Marxist political theory while in prison and found particular interest in Bookchin s works 58 59 Ocalan attempted in early 2004 to arrange a meeting with Bookchin through his lawyers describing himself as Bookchin s student eager to adapt his thought to Middle Eastern society Bookchin was too ill to accept the request In May 2004 Bookchin conveyed this message My hope is that the Kurdish people will one day be able to establish a free rational society that will allow their brilliance once again to flourish They are fortunate indeed to have a leader of Mr Ocalan s talents to guide them When Bookchin died in 2006 the PKK hailed the American thinker as one of the greatest social scientists of the 20th century and vowed to put his theory into practice 58 His ideas particularly those related to social ecology and libertarian municipalism have influenced the Zapatistas and their approach to autonomy and self governance 60 The Zapatistas who rose to prominence in 1994 developed their autonomous government structure which includes grassroots democracy inspired by their experiences and the communal traditions of the indigenous population While Bookchin s influence is more directly associated with the Kurdish movement in Rojava the principles of decentralization direct democracy and the rejection of hierarchical structures align with some of the core ideas he promoted 61 Democratic confederalism the variation on Communalism developed by Ocalan in his writings and adopted by the PKK does not outwardly seek Kurdish rights within the context of the formation of an independent state separate from Turkey The PKK claims that this project is not envisioned as being only for Kurds but rather for all peoples of the region regardless of their ethnic national or religious background Rather it promulgates the formation of assemblies and organizations beginning at the grassroots level to enact its ideals in a non state framework beginning at the local level It also places a particular emphasis on securing and promoting women s rights 58 The PKK has had some success in implementing its programme through organizations such as the Democratic Society Congress DTK which coordinates political and social activities within Turkey and the Koma Civaken Kurdistan KCK which does so across all countries where Kurds live 62 Selected works editMain article Murray Bookchin bibliography Post Scarcity Anarchism 1971 The Spanish Anarchists The Heroic Years 1977 The Ecology of Freedom The Emergence and Dissolution of Hierarchy 1982 See also editEco socialism History of the Green Party of the United States Outline of libertarianismReferences edit Small Mike August 8 2006 Murray Bookchin Obituary The Guardian Archived from the original on July 16 2022 Retrieved June 30 2018 a b c Bookchin Murray January 2005 The Ecology of Freedom The Emergence and Dissolution of Hierarchy Chico CA AK Press pp 8 11 ISBN 978 1904859260 Archived from the original on April 25 2022 Retrieved June 30 2018 John Muir Institute for Environmental Studies University of New Mexico Environmental Philosophy Inc University of Georgia Environmental Ethics v 12 1990 193 Bookchin Murray The Future of the Left The Next Revolution Popular Assemblies and the Promise of Direct Democracy New York Verso Books 2015 pp 157 158 Biehl Janet Bookchin Breaks with Anarchism Communalism October 2007 1 theanarchistlibrary org Archived from the original on July 30 2020 Retrieved May 25 2023 The Murray Bookchin Reader Introduction Archived from the original on October 14 2007 The Murray Bookchin Reader Intro Dwardmac pitzer edu Archived from the original on September 6 2011 Retrieved May 11 2012 a b Anarchism in America documentary YouTube January 9 2007 Archived from the original on November 14 2021 Retrieved May 11 2012 Price Andy The Independent Murray Bookchin Political philosopher and activist who became a founder of the ecological movement August 19 2006 The Independent London August 19 2006 Archived from the original on June 18 2022 Retrieved November 11 2012 Martin Douglas August 7 2006 Murray Bookchin 85 writer Activist and Ecology Theorist Dies August 7 2006 The New York Times Archived from the original on May 31 2015 Retrieved November 11 2012 Light 1998 p 27 Paull John 2013 The Rachel Carson Letters and the Making of Silent Spring Archived November 3 2013 at the Wayback Machine Sage Open 3 July 1 12 A Short Biography of Murray Bookchin by Janet Biehl Dwardmac pitzer edu Archived from the original on August 7 2020 Retrieved May 11 2012 Ecology and Revolution Dwardmac pitzer edu June 16 2004 Archived from the original on August 29 2020 Retrieved May 11 2012 Listen Marxist Nasalam org Archived from the original on August 29 2020 Retrieved May 11 2012 Walker Jesse July 31 2006 Murray Bookchin RIP Archived October 12 2012 at the Wayback Machine Reason Reflections Murray Bookchin dwardmac pitzer edu Archived from the original on October 15 2018 Retrieved October 16 2019 Biehl Janet 2015 Ecology or catastrophe the life of Murray Bookchin New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 934248 8 Rossi Marco Rosaire April 3 2022 The Sanders Bookchin Debate Capitalism Nature Socialism 33 2 120 138 doi 10 1080 10455752 2022 2051058 ISSN 1045 5752 S2CID 247404346 Archived from the original on June 27 2023 Retrieved June 27 2023 Vote Green leaflet https www scribd com doc 229304919 Vote Bea Retrieved February 24 2024 Biehl Janet March 22 2015 The Left Green Network 1988 91 Ecology or Catastrophe Archived from the original on March 25 2015 Retrieved November 16 2019 Martin Douglas August 7 2006 Murray Bookchin visionary social theorist dies at 85 The New York Times Archived from the original on October 1 2018 Retrieved February 22 2017 Bookchin Murray 1996 The Philosophy of Social Ecology Essays on Dialectical Naturalism Montreal Black Rose Books p x Bookchin Murray 1982 The Ecology of Freedom US Cheshire Books p 20 See Re Enchanting Humanity London Cassell 1995 amongst other works Curran 2007 p 174 Murray Bookchin The Ecology of Freedom the emergence and dissolution of Hierarchy Cheshire Books Palo Alto 1982 p 3 ISBN missing Murray Bookchin The Ecology of Freedom the emergence and dissolution of Hierarchy Cheshire Books Palo Alto 1982 p 8 ISBN missing a b c d Bookchin Murray 2015 Bookchin Debbie Taylor Blair eds The next revolution Popular assemblies and the promise of direct democracy with a foreword by Ursula K Le Guin London Verso Books ISBN 978 1781685815 a b Bookchin Murray 2006 Social Ecology and Communalism PDF AK Press ISBN 978 1 904859 49 9 Archived PDF from the original on November 24 2020 Retrieved February 23 2023 Bookchin Murray 2007 What is Social Ecology PDF psichenatura it Archived PDF from the original on December 27 2015 Retrieved February 23 2023 Light 1998 p 5 Stokols Daniel 2018 Social Ecology in the Digital Age Solving Complex Problems in a Globalized World Elsevier Science p 33 ISBN 978 0 12 803114 8 Archived from the original on September 21 2023 Retrieved July 22 2018 via Google Books On Bookchin s Social Ecology and its Contributions to Social Movements social ecology org 2018 Archived from the original on September 29 2017 Retrieved February 23 2023 a b Light 1998 p 6 a b Light 1998 p 7 a b Light 1998 p 8 McKay Iain An Anarchist FAQ AK Press Oakland 2008 pp 65 ISBN missing Light 1998 pp 5 6 Questions pour un autre futur Questions for another future in French Le Courrier July 25 2016 Archived from the original on May 27 2017 Retrieved February 23 2023 Rencontres Internationales de l Ecologie Sociale 27 28 et 29 mai 2016 Lyon International Meetings of Social Ecology 27 28 and 29 May 2016 Lyon in French Passerelle eco March 16 2016 Archived from the original on February 23 2023 Retrieved February 23 2023 Tokar Brian 2010 Bookchin s Social Ecology and its Contributions to the Red Green Movement In Huan Qingzhi ed Eco socialism as Politics Rebuilding the Basis of Our Modern Civilisation Springer Science Business Media pp 123 140 123 127 doi 10 1007 978 90 481 3745 9 8 ISBN 978 90 481 3745 9 a b Bookchin Debbie June 15 2018 How My Father s Ideas Helped the Kurds Create a New Democracy The New York Review of Books Archived from the original on September 1 2020 Retrieved May 20 2016 Fernandez Benjamin July 2016 Murray Bookchin ecologie ou barbarie Murray Bookchin ecology or barbarism in French Le Monde diplomatique Archived from the original on November 17 2016 Retrieved February 23 2023 a b A Dream of Secular Utopia in ISIS Backyard The New York Times November 24 2015 Archived from the original on December 8 2016 Retrieved July 1 2020 a b Shilton Dor June 9 2019 In the Heart of Syria s Darkness a Democratic Egalitarian and Feminist Society Emerges Haaretz Archived from the original on July 2 2020 Retrieved July 2 2020 Malik Kenan October 27 2019 Syria s Kurds dreamt of a Rojava revolution Assad will snuff this out The Guardian Archived from the original on May 25 2020 Retrieved July 2 2020 Revolution in Rojava Democratic Autonomy and Women s Liberation in Syrian Kurdistan Pluto Books Archived from the original on June 22 2020 Retrieved July 2 2020 Krajeski Jenna October 14 2019 What the World Loses if Turkey Destroys the Syrian Kurds The New York Times Archived from the original on July 3 2020 Retrieved July 2 2020 Baird Vanessa June 22 2020 In the Autonomous Zones The New International Archived from the original on July 1 2020 Retrieved July 2 2020 Bookchin Murray Free Cities Communalism and the Left Archived from the original on April 25 2022 Retrieved March 18 2022 Taylor Rafael March 22 2016 The New PKK unleashing a social revolution in Kurdistan Co operation in Mesopotamia Archived from the original on July 24 2023 Retrieved July 24 2023 Bookchin M October 1991 Libertarian Municipalism An Overview Green Perspectives No 24 Burlington VT Bookchin Murray 2015 The Next Revolution London Verso Press p 96 ISBN 9781781685822 a b Bookchin Murray Vanek David October 1 2001 Interview with Murray Bookchin Harbinger a Journal of Social Ecology Vol 2 no 1 Institute for Social Ecology Bookchin Debbie June 15 2018 How My Father s Ideas Helped the Kurds Create a New Democracy The New York Review of Books Archived from the original on September 1 2020 Retrieved October 23 2019 Barnard Anne Hubbard Ben January 25 2018 Allies or Terrorists Who Are the Kurdish Fighters in Syria The New York Times Archived from the original on September 1 2020 Retrieved October 23 2019 a b c Biehl Janet February 16 2012 Bookchin Ocalan and the Dialectics of Democracy New Compass Archived from the original on April 1 2016 Retrieved January 27 2014 de Jong Alex March 2016 The New Old PKK Jacobin Archived from the original on April 28 2016 Retrieved March 29 2016 From Chiapas to Rojava The Rise of a New Revolutionary Paradigm Hampton Institute February 26 2016 Retrieved October 27 2023 The ghost of anarcho syndicalism Murray Bookchin libcom org Retrieved October 27 2023 Biehl Janet October 9 2011 Kurdish Communalism New Compass Archived from the original on September 1 2020 Retrieved January 27 2014 Bibliography editCurran Giorel 2007 21st Century Dissent Anarchism Anti Globalization and Environmentalism International Political Economy Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 4039 4881 6 Light Andrew ed 1998 Social Ecology After Bookchin Guilford Press ISBN 1 57230 379 4 LCCN 98 35447 Archived from the original on September 21 2023 Retrieved July 22 2018 Price Andy 2012 Social Ecology In Kinna Ruth ed The Continuum Companion to Anarchism Continuum International Publishing Group pp 231 249 ISBN 978 1 4411 4270 2 Further reading editLibrary resources about Murray Bookchin Resources in your library Resources in other libraries By Murray Bookchin Online books Resources in your library Resources in other libraries Price Andy Recovering Bookchin Social Ecology and the Crises of Our Time New Compass 2012 Biehl Janet Ecology or Catastrophe The Life of Murray Bookchin Oxford University Press 2015 Biehl Janet The Murray Bookchin Reader Cassell 1997 ISBN 0 304 33874 5 Biehl Janet Mumford Gutkind Bookchin The Emergence of Eco Decentralism New Compass 2011 ISBN 978 82 93064 10 7 Marshall P 1992 Murray Bookchin and the Ecology of Freedom pp 602 622 in Demanding the Impossible Fontana Press ISBN 0 00 686245 4 Morris Brian 2017 Anarchism and Environmental Philosophy In Jun Nathan ed Brill s Companion to Anarchism and Philosophy Leiden Brill pp 369 400 doi 10 1163 9789004356894 015 ISBN 978 90 04 35689 4 Selva Varengo La rivoluzione ecologica Il pensiero libertario di Murray Bookchin 2007 Milano Zero in condotta ISBN 978 88 95950 00 6 E Castano Ecologia e potere Un saggio su Murray Bookchin Mimesis Milano 2011 ISBN 978 88 575 0501 5 Damian F White Bookchin A Critical Appraisal Pluto Press UK Europe University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 7453 1965 0 HBK ISBN 978 0745319643 pbk Neither Washington Nor Stowe Common Sense For The Working Vermonter by David Van Deusen Sean West and the Green Mountain Anarchist Collective NEFAC VT Catamount Tavern Press 2004 This libertarian socialist manifesto took many of Bookchin s ideas and articulated them as they would manifest in a revolutionary Vermont External links editMurray Bookchin at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Data from Wikidata Murray Bookchin entry at the Anarchy Archives Murray Bookchin Papers at Tamiment Library and Robert F Wagner Archives at New York University International Online Conference 2021 100 years Murray Bookchin Institute of Social Ecology official site Portals nbsp Anarchism nbsp Communism nbsp Environment nbsp Libertarianism nbsp Organized Labour nbsp Politics nbsp Socialism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Murray Bookchin amp oldid 1220300217 Municipalism and communalism, 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