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'''A.2.9 Che tipo di società vogliono gli anarchici? '''
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==A.2.9 What sort of society do anarchists want?==
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Anarchists desire a decentralised society, based on free association. We consider this form of society the best one for maximising the values we have outlined above -- liberty, equality and solidarity. Only by a rational decentralisation of power, both structurally and territorially, can individual liberty be fostered and encouraged. The delegation of power into the hands of a minority is an obvious denial of individual liberty and dignity. Rather than taking the management of their own affairs away from people and putting it in the hands of others, anarchists favour organisations which minimise authority, keeping power at the base, in the hands of those who are affected by any decisions reached.
  
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Free association is the cornerstone of an anarchist society. Individuals must be free to join together as they see fit, for this is the basis of freedom and human dignity. However, any such free agreement must be based on decentralisation of power; otherwise it will be a sham (as in capitalism), as only equality provides the necessary social context for freedom to grow and development. Therefore anarchists support directly democratic collectives, based on "one person one vote" (for the rationale of direct democracy as the political counterpart of free agreement, see section A.2.11 -- [[HTTPHTTP//www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/1931/secA2.html#seca211| Why do most anarchists support direct democracy?]]).
  
Gli anarchici desiderano una società decentralizzata, basata sulla libera associazione. Noi consideriamo questa forma di società la migliore possibile per massimizzare i valori presentati in precedenza -- libertà, uguaglianza e solidarietà. Soltanto attraverso una decentralizzazione razionale del potere, sia strutturale che territoriale, la libertà individuale può essere promossa e incoraggiata. La delega del potere nelle mani di una minoranza è una evidente negazione della libertà e della dignità individuale. Piuttosto che togliere al popolo la gestione dei loro affari e metterla nelle mani di altri, gli anarchici preferiscono le organizzazioni che minimizzano l'autorità, mantengono il potere alla base, nelle mani di coloro sui quali si ripercuotono tutte le decisioni prese.  
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We should point out here that an anarchist society does not imply some sort of idyllic state of harmony within which everyone agrees. Far from it! As Luigi Galleani points out, ''"[d]isagreements and friction will always exist. In fact they are an essential condition of unlimited progress. But once the bloody area of sheer animal competition - the struggle for food - has been eliminated, problems of disagreement could be solved without the slightest threat to the social order and individual liberty." '' ['''The End of Anarchism?''', p. 28] Anarchism aims to ''"rouse the spirit of initiative in individuals and in groups."'' These will ''"create in their mutual relations a movement and a life based on the principles of free understanding"'' and recognise that ''"'''variety, conflict even, is life and that uniformity is death.'''"'' [Peter Kropotkin, '''Anarchism''', p. 143]
  
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Therefore, an anarchist society will be based upon co-operative conflict as ''"[c]onflict, per se, is not harmful. . . disagreements exist [and should not be hidden] . . . What makes disagreement destructive is not the fact of conflict itself but the addition of competition."'' Indeed, ''"a rigid demand for agreement means that people will effectively be prevented from contributing their wisdom to a group effort."'' [Alfie Kohn, '''No Contest: The Case Against Competition''', p. 156] It is for this reason that most anarchists reject consensus decision making in large groups (see section [[HTTPHTTP//www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/1931/secA2.html#seca212|A.2.12]]).
  
La libera associazione è la pietra angolare di una società anarchica. Gli individui devono essere liberi di unirsi a loro discrezione, perché questo è il fondamento della libertà e della dignità umana. Tuttavia, qualsiasi accordo libero deve essere basato sul decentramento del potere; altrimenti sarà una farsa (come nel capitalismo), poiché solo l'uguaglianza fornisce il contesto sociale necessario per la crescita e lo sviluppo della libertà. Pertanto gli anarchici sostengono direttamente i collettivi democratici, basati su "una persona un voto" (per la logica di democrazia diretta come controparte politica del libero accordo, si veda la sezione A.2.11 -- [http://www.infoshop.org/page/AnarchistFAQSectionA2#seca211 Perché la maggior parte degli anarchici sostiene della democrazia diretta?]).  
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So, in an anarchist society associations would be run by mass assemblies of all involved, based upon extensive discussion, debate and co-operative conflict between equals, with purely administrative tasks being handled by elected committees. These committees would be made up of mandated, recallable and temporary delegates who carry out their tasks under the watchful eyes of the assembly which elected them. Thus in an anarchist society, ''"we'll look after our affairs ourselves and decide what to do about them. And when, to put our ideas into action, there is a need to put someone in charge of a project, we'll tell them to do [it] in such and such a way and no other . . . nothing would be done without our decision. So our delegates, instead of people being individuals whom we've given the right to order us about, would be people . . . [with] no authority, only the duty to carry out what everyone involved wanted."'' [Errico Malatesta, '''Fra Contadini''', p. 34] If the delegates act against their mandate or try to extend their influence or work beyond that already decided by the assembly (i.e. if they start to make policy decisions), they can be instantly recalled and their decisions abolished. In this way, the organisation remains in the hands of the union of individuals who created it.
  
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This self-management by the members of a group at the base and the power of recall are essential tenets of any anarchist organisation. The '''key''' difference between a statist or hierarchical system and an anarchist community is who wields power. In a parliamentary system, for example, people give power to a group of representatives to make decisions for them for a fixed period of time. Whether they carry out their promises is irrelevant as people cannot recall them till the next election. Power lies at the top and those at the base are expected to obey. Similarly, in the capitalist workplace, power is held by an unelected minority of bosses and managers at the top and the workers are expected to obey.
  
A questo punto dobbiamo ricordare che la società anarchica non implica una sorta di stato idilliaco di armonia nella quale tutti sono d'accordo. Tutt'altro! Come fece notare Luigi Galleani, ''"disaccordi ed attriti esisteranno sempre. In effetti essi sono una condizione essenziale del progresso illimitato. Ma una volta che il dannato campo della pura competizione animale - la lotta per il cibo - sarà eliminato, problemi e divergenze potranno essere risolti senza la minima minaccia all'ordine sociale e alla libertà individuale."''<nowiki> [</nowiki>'''The End of Anarchism?''', p.28] L'anarchismo mira a ''"suscitare lo spirito di iniziativa negli individui e nei gruppi"''. Questo ''"genererà nelle loro relazioni reciproche un movimento e una vita basati sul principio della libera comprensione"'' e riconoscerà che ''"la varietà, perfino il conflitto, è vita e che la uniformità è morte"''<nowiki>. [Peter Kropotkin, </nowiki>'''Anarchism''', p.143]
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In an anarchist society this relationship is reversed. No one individual or group (elected or unelected) holds power in an anarchist community. Instead decisions are made using direct democratic principles and, when required, the community can elect or appoint delegates to carry out these decisions. There is a clear distinction between policy making (which lies with everyone who is affected) and the co-ordination and administration of any adopted policy (which is the job for delegates).
  
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These egalitarian communities, founded by free agreement, also freely associate together in confederations. Such a free confederation would be run from the bottom up, with decisions following from the elemental assemblies upwards. The confederations would be run in the same manner as the collectives. There would be regular local regional, "national" and international conferences in which all important issues and problems affecting the collectives involved would be discussed. In addition, the fundamental, guiding principles and ideas of society would be debated and policy decisions made, put into practice, reviewed, and co-ordinated. The delegates would simply ''"take their given mandates to the relative meetings and try to harmonise their various needs and desires. The deliberations would always be subject to the control and approval of those who delegated them"'' and so ''"there would be no danger than the interest of the people [would] be forgotten."'' [Malatesta, '''Op. Cit.''', p. 36]
  
Quindi una società anarchica dovrà essere basata sul conflitto cooperativo poiché ''<nowiki>"il conflitto, di per se, non è dannoso, le divergenze esistono [e non dovrebbero essere nascoste]... Quello che rende distruttivo il conflitto non è il fatto stesso del conflitto ma l'aggiunta della competizione”</nowiki>''. Anzi, ''"una rigida richiesta di accordo significa che in realtà sarà impedito al popolo di contribuire con la loro saggezza allo sforzo del gruppo"''<nowiki>. [Alfie Kohn, </nowiki>'''No Contest: The Case Against Competition''', p. 156] Questa è la ragione per cui la maggior parte degli anarchici rifiuta di prendere decisioni consensuali in grandi gruppi (vedere la sezione [http://www.infoshop.org/page/AnarchistFAQSectionA2#seca212 A.2.12]).
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Action committees would be formed, if required, to co-ordinate and administer the decisions of the assemblies and their congresses, under strict control from below as discussed above. Delegates to such bodies would have a limited tenure and, like the delegates to the congresses, have a fixed mandate -- they are not able to make decisions on behalf of the people they are delegates for. In addition, like the delegates to conferences and congresses, they would be subject to instant recall by the assemblies and congresses from which they emerged in the first place. In this way any committees required to co-ordinate join activities would be, to quote Malatesta's words, ''"always under the direct control of the population"'' and so express the ''"decisions taken at popular assemblies."'' ['''Errico Malatesta: His Life and Ideas''', p. 175 and p. 129]
  
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Most importantly, the basic community assemblies can overturn any decisions reached by the conferences and withdraw from any confederation. Any compromises that are made by a delegate during negotiations have to go back to a general assembly for ratification. Without that ratification any compromises that are made by a delegate are not binding on the community that has delegated a particular task to a particular individual or committee. In addition, they can call confederal conferences to discuss new developments and to inform action committees about changing wishes and to instruct them on what to do about any developments and ideas.
  
Così, in una società anarchica le associazioni sarebbero dirette attraverso assemblee di massa di tutti i soggetti coinvolti, basate su una ampia discussione, il dibattito e il conflitto cooperativo tra soggetti uguali, con i compiti puremente amministrativi eseguiti da comitati eletti. Questi comitati sarebbero costituiti da delegati mandatari, ricollocabili e temporanei che eseguono i loro compiti sotto gli occhi attenti della assemblea che li ha eletti. In questo modo in una società anarchica, ''"ci occuperemo noi stessi dei nostri affari e decideremo il da farsi. E quando, per mettere in pratica le nostre idee, ci sarà il bisogno di affidare ad alcuni la responsabilità di un progetto, noi diremo loro di farlo in tale modo e in nessun altro... nulla dovrà essere fatto senza la nostra decisione. Così i nostri delegati, invece che persone diventate individui ai quali abbiamo dato il diritto di darci ordini, sarebbero persone... senza autorità, con il solo dovere di eseguire quello che vogliono tutti i soggetti coinvolti"''<nowiki>. [Errico Malatesta, </nowiki>'''Fra Contadini''', p. 34] Se i delegati agissero contro il proprio mandato o provassero ad estendere la loro influenza o il loro lavoro oltre a quello già deciso dall'assemblea (ad esempio se cominciassero a prendere decisioni politiche), potrebbero essere immediatamente richiamati e le loro decisioni abolite. In questo modo, l'organizzazione rimane nelle mani della unione di individui che la ha creata.  
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In other words, any delegates required within an anarchist organisation or society are '''not''' representatives (as they are in a democratic government). Kropotkin makes the difference clear:
  
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<blockquote>'' "The question of true delegation versus representation can be better understood if one imagines a hundred or two hundred men [and women], who meet each day in their work and share common concerns . . . who have discussed every aspect of the question that concerns them and have reached a decision. They then choose someone and send him [or her] to reach an agreement with other delegates of the same kind. . . The delegate is not authorised to do more than explain to other delegates the considerations that have led his [or her] colleagues to their conclusion. Not being able to impose anything, he [or she] will seek an understanding and will return with a simple proposition which his mandatories can accept or refuse. This is what happens when true delegation comes into being."'' ['''Words of a Rebel''', p. 132] </blockquote>
  
Questa auto-gestione da parte dei membri di un gruppo alla base ed il loro potere di richiamo sono i principi necessari di ogni organizzazione anarchica. La '''principale''' differenza tra un sistema statista o gerarchico e una comunità anarchica è in chi esercita il potere. In un sistema parlamentare, per esempio, il popolo dà il potere ad un gruppo di rappresentanti che prendono decisioni per loro per un determinato periodo di tempo. Che essi mantengano le loro promesse è irrilevante perchè la gente non può revocarli fino alle prossime elezioni. Il potere è in alto e coloro che sono in basso sono tenuti ad obbedire. Allo stesso modo, in un luogo di lavoro capitalista il potere è in mano ad una minoranza non eletta di capi e manager in alto e i lavoratori sono tenuti ad obbedire.  
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Unlike in a representative system, '''power''' is not delegated into the hands of the few. Rather, any delegate is simply a mouthpiece for the association that elected (or otherwise selected) them in the first place. All delegates and action committees would be mandated and subject to instant recall to ensure they express the wishes of the assemblies they came from rather than their own. In this way government is replaced by anarchy, a network of free associations and communities co-operating as equals based on a system of mandated delegates, instant recall, free agreement and free federation from the bottom up.
  
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Only this system would ensure the ''"free organisation of the people, an organisation from below upwards."'' This ''"free federation from below upward"'' would start with the basic ''"association"'' and their federation ''"first into a commune, then a federation of communes into regions, of regions into nations, and of nations into an international fraternal association."'' [Michael Bakunin, '''The Political Philosophy of Bakunin''', p. 298] This network of anarchist communities would work on three levels. There would be ''"independent Communes for the territorial organisation, and of federations of Trade Unions [i.e. workplace associations] for the organisation of men [and women] in accordance with their different functions. . . [and] free combines and societies . . . for the satisfaction of all possible and imaginable needs, economic, sanitary, and educational; for mutual protection, for the propaganda of ideas, for arts, for amusement, and so on."'' [Peter Kropotkin, '''Evolution and Environment''', p. 79] All would be based on self-management, free association, free federation and self-organisation from the bottom up.
  
In una società anarchica questa relazione è invertita. Nessun individuo o gruppo (eletto o non eletto) detiene il potere in una comunità anarchica. Invece le decisioni sono prese usando direttamente i principi democratici e, quando richiesto, la comunità può eleggere o nominare delegati per eseguire le loro decisioni. Esiste una chiara differenza tra fare politica (che riguarda chiunque ne è influenzato) e la coordinazione e la gestione di una qualsiasi politica adottata (che è lavoro per i delegati).  
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By organising in this manner, hierarchy is abolished in all aspects of life, because the people at the base of the organisation are in control, '''not''' their delegates. Only this form of organisation can replace government (the initiative and empowerment of the few) with anarchy (the initiative and empowerment of all). This form of organisation would exist in all activities which required group work and the co-ordination of many people. It would be, as Bakunin said, the means ''"to integrate individuals into structures which they could understand and control."'' [quoted by Cornelius Castoriadis, '''Political and Social Writings''', vol. 2, p. 97] For individual initiatives, the individual involved would manage them.
  
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As can be seen, anarchists wish to create a society based upon structures that ensure that no individual or group is able to wield power over others. Free agreement, confederation and the power of recall, fixed mandates and limited tenure are mechanisms by which power is removed from the hands of governments and placed in the hands of those directly affected by the decisions.
  
Queste comunità egualitarie, fondate con accordi liberi, inoltre si associano insieme liberamente in confederazioni. Una tale libera confederazione sarebbe gestita dal basso verso l'alto, con le decisioni che derivano dalle assemblee elementari verso l'alto. Le confederazioni sarebbero gestite allo stesso modo dei collettivi. Ci sarebbero regolarmente conferenze locali regionali, "nazionali" e internazionali nelle quali sarebbero discusse tutte le questioni e i problemi importanti riguardanti i collettivi coinvolti. Inoltre, sarebbero discussi i principi e le idee guida fondamentali della società e sarebbero prese decisioni politiche, messe in pratica, riviste e coordinate. I delegati semplicemente "''porterebbero i loro mandati ai relativi incontri e cercherebbero di armonizzare i loro diversi desideri ed esigenze. Le deliberazioni sarebbero sempre soggette al controllo ed alla approvazione di coloro che li hanno delegati" e così "non ci sarebbe pericolo che l'interesse del popolo fosse dimenticato"''<nowiki>. [Malatesta, </nowiki>'''Op. Cit.''', p. 36]
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For a fuller discussion on what an anarchist society would look like see [[HTTPHTTP//www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/1931/secIcon.html|section I]]. Anarchy, however, is not some distant goal but rather an aspect of current struggles against oppression and exploitation. Means and ends are linked, with direct action generating mass participatory organisations and preparing people to directly manage their own personal and collective interests. This is because anarchists, as we discuss in [[HTTPHTTP//www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/1931/secI2.html#seci23|section I.2.3]], see the framework of a free society being based on the organisations created by the oppressed in their struggle against capitalism in the here and now. In this sense, collective struggle creates the organisations as well as the individual attitudes anarchism needs to work. The struggle against oppression is the school of anarchy. It teaches us not only how to be anarchists but also gives us a glimpse of what an anarchist society would be like, what its initial organisational framework could be and the experience of managing our own activities which is required for such a society to work. As such, anarchists try to create the kind of world we want in our current struggles and do not think our ideas are only applicable "after the revolution." Indeed, by applying our principles today we bring anarchy that much nearer.
 
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Verrebbero costituiti comitati di azione, se richiesto, per coordinare e gestire le decisioni delle assemblee e dei loro congressi, sotto lo stretto controllo dal basso come sopra detto. I delegati a tali organismi avrebbero un mandato limitato, come i delegati ai congressi, ed un incarico preciso -- essi non sono in grado di prendere decisione in nome del popolo che rappresentano. In più, come i delegati alle conferenze e ai congressi, sarebbero soggetti alla revoca immediata da parte delle assemblee e dei congressi dai quali sono stati scelti al primo posto. In questo modo ogni comitato richiesto per coordinare le attività comuni sarebbe, citando le parole di Malatesta, ''"sempre sotto il diretto controllo della popolazione"'' e questo esprime le ''"decisioni prese alle assemblee popolari"''<nowiki>.[</nowiki>'''Errico Malatesta: His Life and Ideas''', p. 175 and p. 129]
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Ma soprattutto, le assemblee della comunità di base possono ribaltare qualsiasi decisione presa dalle conferenze e recedere da qualunque confederazione. Qualsiasi compromesso che sia fatto da un delegato durante i negoziati deve ritornare ad un assemblea generale per la ratifica. Senza tale ratifica qualsiasi compromesso che sia fatto da un delegato non è vincolante per la comunità che ha delegato un compito particolare ad una determinata persona o comitato. Inoltre, essi possono convocare conferenze confederali per discutere i nuovi sviluppi e per informare i comitati di azione sul cambiamento delle volontà e per istruirli su cosa fare su eventuali sviluppi e idee.
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In altre parole, qualsiasi delegato richiesto nell'ambito di una organizzazione o una società anarchica '''non''' è rappresentativo (come lo è in un governo democratico). Kropotkin chiarisce la differenza:
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''<nowiki>"La questione della vera delega rispetto alla rappresentanza può essere meglio compresa se si immagina cento o duecento uomini [e donne], che si incontrano ogni giorno nel loro lavoro e condividono interessi comuni... che hanno discusso ogni aspetto della questione che riguarda loro e hanno raggiunto una decisione. Quindi scelgono qualcuno e lo [o la] inviano per raggiungere un accordo con gli altri delegati dello stesso tipo... Il delegato non è autorizzato a fare di più che spiegare agli altri delegati le considerazioni che hanno portato i suoi colleghi alla loro conclusione. Non essendo in grado di imporre nulla, egli [o ella] cercherà una intesa e ritornerà con una semplice proposta, che i suoi mandatari possono accettare o rifiutare. Questo è ciò che accade quando si realizza la vera delega"</nowiki>''<nowiki>. [</nowiki>'''Words of a Rebel,''' p. 132]
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A differenza di un sistema rappresentativo, il '''potere''' non viene delegato nelle mani di pochi. Anzi, ciascun delegato è semplicemente un portavoce per l'associazione che lo ha eletto (o altrimenti selezionato) al primo posto. Tutti i delegati e i comitati azione sarebbero nominati e soggetti a richiamo immediato per garantire che essi esprimano la volontà delle assemblee di provenienza piuttosto che la propria. In questo modo il governo è sostituito dall'anarchia, una rete di libere associazioni e le comunità che collaborano alla pari basata su un sistema di delegati, il richiamo immediato, un accordo di libero ed una libera federazione dal basso verso l'alto.
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Solo in questo sistema garantirebbe la ''"libera organizzazione del popolo, un'organizzazione dal basso verso l'alto"''. Questa ''"libera federazione dal basso verso l'alto"'' inizierebbe con la ''"associazione"'' di base e la loro federazione ''"prima in un comune, poi in una federazione di comuni in regioni, di regioni in nazioni, e di nazioni in una ''<nowiki>associazione internazionale fraterna". [Michael Bakunin, </nowiki>'''The Political Philosophy of Bakunin''', p. 298] Questa rete di comunità anarchiche funzionerebbe su tre livelli. Ci sarebbero ''<nowiki>"Comuni indipendenti per l'organizzazione territoriale e federazioni di sindacati [vale a dire le associazioni dei lavoratori] per l'organizzazione degli uomini [e delle donne] in accordo alle loro diverse funzioni... [e] liberi gruppi e associazioni... per la soddisfazione di tutte le esigenze possibili e immaginabili, economiche, sanitarie ed educative; per la reciproca protezione, per la propaganda di idee, per le arti, per divertimento, e così via"</nowiki>''<nowiki>. [Peter Kropotkin, </nowiki>'''Evolution and Environment''', p. 79] Tutto sarebbe basato sulla auto-gestione, la libera associazione, la libera federazione e auto-organizzazione dal basso verso l'alto.
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Organizzando in questo modo, la gerarchia viene abolita in tutti gli aspetti della vita, perché il popolo alla base dell'organizzazione è al comando, '''non''' i loro delegati. Solo questa forma di organizzazione è in grado di sostituire il governo (l'iniziativa ed il potere di pochi) con l'anarchia (l'iniziativa e il potere di tutti). Questa forma di organizzazione esisterebbero in tutte le attività che richiedono il lavoro di gruppo e il coordinamento di molte persone. Sarebbe, come Bakunin ha detto, il mezzo ''"per integrare le persone in strutture che potevano capire e controllare"''<nowiki>. [citato da Cornelius Castoriadis, </nowiki>'''Political and Social Writings''', vol. 2, p. 97] Per le singole iniziative, le gestirebbe la persona coinvolta.  
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Come si vede, gli anarchici desiderano creare una società basata su strutture che garantiscano che nessun individuo o gruppo sia in grado di esercitare potere sugli altri. L'accordo libero, la confederazione ed il potere di richiamo, mandati definiti e limitata permanenza in carica sono meccanismi attraverso i quali viene rimosso il potere dalle mani dei governi e posto nelle mani di coloro che sono direttamente interessati dalle decisioni.
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Per una discussione più ampia su ciò che sarebbe una società anarchica vedi la [http://www.infoshop.org/page/secIcon.html sezione I]. L'anarchia, però, non è un obiettivo lontano ma piuttosto un aspetto delle attuali lotte contro l'oppressione e lo sfruttamento. Mezzi e fini sono collegati, con l'azione diretta che genera partecipazioni di massa alle organizzazioni e che preparano il popolo a gestire direttamente i propri interessi personali e collettivi. Questo è perché gli anarchici, come vedremo nella [http://www.infoshop.org/page/AnarchistFAQSectionI2#seci23 sezione I.2.3], vedono il quadro di una società libera basata sulle organizzazioni create dagli oppressi nella loro lotta contro il capitalismo nel presente. In questo senso, la lotta collettiva crea le organizzazioni così come le attitudini individuali di cui l'anarchismo ha bisogno per funzionare. La lotta contro l'oppressione è la scuola di anarchia. Essa ci insegna non solo come essere anarchici, ma ci dà anche un assaggio di ciò che sarebbe una società anarchica, quale sarebbe la sua struttura organizzativa iniziale e l'esperienza di gestione delle nostra attività che è necessaria perché una tale società funzioni. Perciò, gli anarchici tentano di creare il tipo di mondo che vogliamo nelle nostre attuali lotte e non credono che le nostre idee sono applicabili solo "dopo la rivoluzione". Infatti, applicando i nostri principi oggi portiamo l'anarchia un po' più vicina.
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Latest revision as of 15:52, 7 September 2010

A.2.9 What sort of society do anarchists want?[modifica]

Anarchists desire a decentralised society, based on free association. We consider this form of society the best one for maximising the values we have outlined above -- liberty, equality and solidarity. Only by a rational decentralisation of power, both structurally and territorially, can individual liberty be fostered and encouraged. The delegation of power into the hands of a minority is an obvious denial of individual liberty and dignity. Rather than taking the management of their own affairs away from people and putting it in the hands of others, anarchists favour organisations which minimise authority, keeping power at the base, in the hands of those who are affected by any decisions reached.

Free association is the cornerstone of an anarchist society. Individuals must be free to join together as they see fit, for this is the basis of freedom and human dignity. However, any such free agreement must be based on decentralisation of power; otherwise it will be a sham (as in capitalism), as only equality provides the necessary social context for freedom to grow and development. Therefore anarchists support directly democratic collectives, based on "one person one vote" (for the rationale of direct democracy as the political counterpart of free agreement, see section A.2.11 -- Why do most anarchists support direct democracy?).

We should point out here that an anarchist society does not imply some sort of idyllic state of harmony within which everyone agrees. Far from it! As Luigi Galleani points out, "[d]isagreements and friction will always exist. In fact they are an essential condition of unlimited progress. But once the bloody area of sheer animal competition - the struggle for food - has been eliminated, problems of disagreement could be solved without the slightest threat to the social order and individual liberty." [The End of Anarchism?, p. 28] Anarchism aims to "rouse the spirit of initiative in individuals and in groups." These will "create in their mutual relations a movement and a life based on the principles of free understanding" and recognise that "variety, conflict even, is life and that uniformity is death." [Peter Kropotkin, Anarchism, p. 143]

Therefore, an anarchist society will be based upon co-operative conflict as "[c]onflict, per se, is not harmful. . . disagreements exist [and should not be hidden] . . . What makes disagreement destructive is not the fact of conflict itself but the addition of competition." Indeed, "a rigid demand for agreement means that people will effectively be prevented from contributing their wisdom to a group effort." [Alfie Kohn, No Contest: The Case Against Competition, p. 156] It is for this reason that most anarchists reject consensus decision making in large groups (see section A.2.12).

So, in an anarchist society associations would be run by mass assemblies of all involved, based upon extensive discussion, debate and co-operative conflict between equals, with purely administrative tasks being handled by elected committees. These committees would be made up of mandated, recallable and temporary delegates who carry out their tasks under the watchful eyes of the assembly which elected them. Thus in an anarchist society, "we'll look after our affairs ourselves and decide what to do about them. And when, to put our ideas into action, there is a need to put someone in charge of a project, we'll tell them to do [it] in such and such a way and no other . . . nothing would be done without our decision. So our delegates, instead of people being individuals whom we've given the right to order us about, would be people . . . [with] no authority, only the duty to carry out what everyone involved wanted." [Errico Malatesta, Fra Contadini, p. 34] If the delegates act against their mandate or try to extend their influence or work beyond that already decided by the assembly (i.e. if they start to make policy decisions), they can be instantly recalled and their decisions abolished. In this way, the organisation remains in the hands of the union of individuals who created it.

This self-management by the members of a group at the base and the power of recall are essential tenets of any anarchist organisation. The key difference between a statist or hierarchical system and an anarchist community is who wields power. In a parliamentary system, for example, people give power to a group of representatives to make decisions for them for a fixed period of time. Whether they carry out their promises is irrelevant as people cannot recall them till the next election. Power lies at the top and those at the base are expected to obey. Similarly, in the capitalist workplace, power is held by an unelected minority of bosses and managers at the top and the workers are expected to obey.

In an anarchist society this relationship is reversed. No one individual or group (elected or unelected) holds power in an anarchist community. Instead decisions are made using direct democratic principles and, when required, the community can elect or appoint delegates to carry out these decisions. There is a clear distinction between policy making (which lies with everyone who is affected) and the co-ordination and administration of any adopted policy (which is the job for delegates).

These egalitarian communities, founded by free agreement, also freely associate together in confederations. Such a free confederation would be run from the bottom up, with decisions following from the elemental assemblies upwards. The confederations would be run in the same manner as the collectives. There would be regular local regional, "national" and international conferences in which all important issues and problems affecting the collectives involved would be discussed. In addition, the fundamental, guiding principles and ideas of society would be debated and policy decisions made, put into practice, reviewed, and co-ordinated. The delegates would simply "take their given mandates to the relative meetings and try to harmonise their various needs and desires. The deliberations would always be subject to the control and approval of those who delegated them" and so "there would be no danger than the interest of the people [would] be forgotten." [Malatesta, Op. Cit., p. 36]

Action committees would be formed, if required, to co-ordinate and administer the decisions of the assemblies and their congresses, under strict control from below as discussed above. Delegates to such bodies would have a limited tenure and, like the delegates to the congresses, have a fixed mandate -- they are not able to make decisions on behalf of the people they are delegates for. In addition, like the delegates to conferences and congresses, they would be subject to instant recall by the assemblies and congresses from which they emerged in the first place. In this way any committees required to co-ordinate join activities would be, to quote Malatesta's words, "always under the direct control of the population" and so express the "decisions taken at popular assemblies." [Errico Malatesta: His Life and Ideas, p. 175 and p. 129]

Most importantly, the basic community assemblies can overturn any decisions reached by the conferences and withdraw from any confederation. Any compromises that are made by a delegate during negotiations have to go back to a general assembly for ratification. Without that ratification any compromises that are made by a delegate are not binding on the community that has delegated a particular task to a particular individual or committee. In addition, they can call confederal conferences to discuss new developments and to inform action committees about changing wishes and to instruct them on what to do about any developments and ideas.

In other words, any delegates required within an anarchist organisation or society are not representatives (as they are in a democratic government). Kropotkin makes the difference clear:

"The question of true delegation versus representation can be better understood if one imagines a hundred or two hundred men [and women], who meet each day in their work and share common concerns . . . who have discussed every aspect of the question that concerns them and have reached a decision. They then choose someone and send him [or her] to reach an agreement with other delegates of the same kind. . . The delegate is not authorised to do more than explain to other delegates the considerations that have led his [or her] colleagues to their conclusion. Not being able to impose anything, he [or she] will seek an understanding and will return with a simple proposition which his mandatories can accept or refuse. This is what happens when true delegation comes into being." [Words of a Rebel, p. 132]

Unlike in a representative system, power is not delegated into the hands of the few. Rather, any delegate is simply a mouthpiece for the association that elected (or otherwise selected) them in the first place. All delegates and action committees would be mandated and subject to instant recall to ensure they express the wishes of the assemblies they came from rather than their own. In this way government is replaced by anarchy, a network of free associations and communities co-operating as equals based on a system of mandated delegates, instant recall, free agreement and free federation from the bottom up.

Only this system would ensure the "free organisation of the people, an organisation from below upwards." This "free federation from below upward" would start with the basic "association" and their federation "first into a commune, then a federation of communes into regions, of regions into nations, and of nations into an international fraternal association." [Michael Bakunin, The Political Philosophy of Bakunin, p. 298] This network of anarchist communities would work on three levels. There would be "independent Communes for the territorial organisation, and of federations of Trade Unions [i.e. workplace associations] for the organisation of men [and women] in accordance with their different functions. . . [and] free combines and societies . . . for the satisfaction of all possible and imaginable needs, economic, sanitary, and educational; for mutual protection, for the propaganda of ideas, for arts, for amusement, and so on." [Peter Kropotkin, Evolution and Environment, p. 79] All would be based on self-management, free association, free federation and self-organisation from the bottom up.

By organising in this manner, hierarchy is abolished in all aspects of life, because the people at the base of the organisation are in control, not their delegates. Only this form of organisation can replace government (the initiative and empowerment of the few) with anarchy (the initiative and empowerment of all). This form of organisation would exist in all activities which required group work and the co-ordination of many people. It would be, as Bakunin said, the means "to integrate individuals into structures which they could understand and control." [quoted by Cornelius Castoriadis, Political and Social Writings, vol. 2, p. 97] For individual initiatives, the individual involved would manage them.

As can be seen, anarchists wish to create a society based upon structures that ensure that no individual or group is able to wield power over others. Free agreement, confederation and the power of recall, fixed mandates and limited tenure are mechanisms by which power is removed from the hands of governments and placed in the hands of those directly affected by the decisions.

For a fuller discussion on what an anarchist society would look like see section I. Anarchy, however, is not some distant goal but rather an aspect of current struggles against oppression and exploitation. Means and ends are linked, with direct action generating mass participatory organisations and preparing people to directly manage their own personal and collective interests. This is because anarchists, as we discuss in section I.2.3, see the framework of a free society being based on the organisations created by the oppressed in their struggle against capitalism in the here and now. In this sense, collective struggle creates the organisations as well as the individual attitudes anarchism needs to work. The struggle against oppression is the school of anarchy. It teaches us not only how to be anarchists but also gives us a glimpse of what an anarchist society would be like, what its initial organisational framework could be and the experience of managing our own activities which is required for such a society to work. As such, anarchists try to create the kind of world we want in our current struggles and do not think our ideas are only applicable "after the revolution." Indeed, by applying our principles today we bring anarchy that much nearer.