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Red & Black Revolution No 9 online

category international | anti-capitalism | other press author Wednesday November 23, 2005 12:24author by Joe Black - Red and Black Revolution

Irish anarchist magazine available for download

ssue 9 (Spring 2005) of the Irish anarchist magazine Red and Black Revolution is now available online. Red and Black Revolution appears every six months, in the Spring and Autumn of each year. RBR 10 will be made available online in December. Apologies for the delays in the online appearance of RBR 9
RBR 9 Cover
RBR 9 Cover

The nomad, the displaced and the settler: Work in the 21st Century
A number of issues are being discussed. Firstly has the workplace changed fundamentally such that people increasingly are in temporary work rather than permanent work? Secondly is the division between work time and non-work time dissolving, are we spending more of our lives 'in work'? Thirdly are the non-work aspects of life becoming increasingly insecure?

A look at workers in Ireland
Chainworkersmeans the 'workers in malls, shopping centres, hypermarkets, and in the myriad of jobs of logistics and selling in the metropolis'. Brainworkers means the knowledge workers, the programmers, the creatives and the freelancers. How do these categories pan out in the Irish labour market? Originally a box in the article The nomad, the displaced and the settler: Work in the 21st Century

After Nationalism
An analysis of why many on the left joined Sinn Fein and what their options are now. I joined Sinn Féin in the mid eighties with many others on the back of what we saw as a radical shift to the left and a commitment to build a 32 county Democartic Socialist Republic. I find myself outside that movement now, thoroughly disillusioned with it and its shift to a left nationalist and social democratic electoralist future.

The Ghost of Mayday Past
Compared to many other European countries May Day demonstrations have always been small in Ireland. By the mid-1990's, May Day had become a fairly underwhelming event. So, given this dismal tradition why were the explicitly libertarian May Day events in 2004, comparatively speaking, such a success? For reason of space, this article had been shortened in the printed edition. The full article is available on the web at: http://www.anarkismo.net/newswire.php?story_id=486

Learning from May Day: Anti-Capitalist Strategy direct action, militancy and building the movement
The experience of May Day brings up us back to some of the perennial questions thrown up by counter-summits protests: how do we broaden our movement and what role do direct action and confrontational tactics have in that process

Learning from May Day: Organisational Problems
Without a proper convergence centre in which to debate and discuss issues related to the protests many of the international activists. Legal and defendant support work was more piecemeal than it should have been. These problems were not just oversights, they are serious political problems

Book Review: To Live
The 'civil war' within the Civil War that occurred in Spain between 1936-39 is a difficult business to understand. Mick Parkin has succeeded admirably in his short novel To Live.

Book Review: Parecon: life after capitalism
Anarchists, in common with all radical proponents of social change are continually asked what their vision of a new society/economy is. The book outlines a radical vision of social and economic reconstruction whose core principles and values, Solidarity, Equity, Diversity and Self-Management, are very familiar to anarchists

[There is one additional article in the printed edition on community organising in the slums of Santiago, Chile. You can pick up the printed edition in Red Ink (Temple Bar, Dublin) or Barracka Books (61 Barrack Street, Cork)

Read the articles online at http://www.struggle.ws/wsm/rbr/rbr9/

Download the PDF file from http://www.struggle.ws/wsm/pdf/rbr/rbr9.html

Comments (6 of 6)

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author by FredPerrypublication date Wed Nov 23, 2005 13:14author address author phone

Isnt this moths old

author by Avid readerpublication date Wed Nov 23, 2005 13:17author address author phone

I've issue ten sitting in front of me.

author by WSM Head pers capspublication date Wed Nov 23, 2005 17:26author address author phone

But the articles and PDF are only going online now.

author by web readerpublication date Wed Nov 23, 2005 18:16author address author phone

When's the PDF of number ten coming out?

Surely converting a file laid out in a program like QuarkXPress or whatever only takes one minute to convert into a PDF for public downloading...

author by Spaniard - CNT-AITpublication date Sat Nov 26, 2005 20:07author address author phone

Where could i buy that magazine in cork?
any anarchist place in cork???

thx

(sorry for my bad english, i just arrived ireland)

Related Link: http://www.iwa-ait.org/
author by James - WSMpublication date Sat Nov 26, 2005 20:16author address author phone

You could try Barracka books on 61 Barrack Street. Or if you'd like to contact Workers Solidarity in Cork you can give them an email at corkwsm@eircom.net. They have reasonably regular open meetings.



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