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Lucien van der Walt
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Lucien van der Walt

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South Africa is a morass of wretched inequality, racial tensions and class conflicts, its transition limited and frustrating. Much blame lies with ongoing "white monopoly capital," but its essential to pay attention to ongoing "denationalisation" by foreign capital. There are also major blind-spots in analyses that omit the central role of the state as owner of means of production (as well as means of coercion & administration). Private and state elites are structurally & programmatically allied, elections cannot emancipate the black working class -- only autonomous mobilisation and action.
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Lucien van der Walt

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Richard Estes and Ron Glick interviewed Lucien van der Walt, co-author of "Black Flame: The Revolutionary Class Politics of Anarchism and Syndicalism," on their show “Speaking In Tongues,” KDVS, 90.3 FM, University Of California, Davis. The interview took place on September 25, 2009.
The interview covers issues like defining anarchism, anarchism and trade unions today, the issue of centralisation, anarchism and globalisation then and now, the Soviet Union and Communism, the Spanish Civil War, anarchism and immigration today, the relationship between class struggle and other forms of oppression, anarchism after Seattle, and anarchism and postmodernism.
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Lucien van der Walt

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**Based on a talk given in Kenya, this his article argues that, while official minimum wages and other improvements are welcome gains, they are inadequate in an exploiting system based on the rule of the few. It is necessary to pose the more ambitious demand for a ‘living wage,’ set by the working class, and to enforce this by building powerful, autonomous, self-managed, conscientised class-struggle movements. Rejecting ‘privilege’ theories, it argues that all sectors of the working class benefit from demands and campaigns that secure equal rights, equal treatment and equal wages, against divide-and-rule systems, and in which strikers build alliances with communities and users. A ‘living wage’ movement of this type should be located in a larger project of building a popular counter-power that can resist, and then topple, ruling class power.
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When we commemorate May Day we rarely reflect on why it is a public holiday in Africa or elsewhere. Sian Byrne, Paliani Chinguwo, Warren McGregor, and Lucien van der Walt tell of the powerful struggles that lie behind its existence, internationally and in Botswana...
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Despotism or democracy at Wits University? The fight for a "Workers’ and Peoples’ University" in a new South Africa in 2001 Lucien van der Walt,  Guest presentation for “Keep Left” meeting, 17 May ...
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Lucien van der Walt

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RADIO: "Poverty And The Living Wage Campaign, " 26 August 2015. Lucien van der Walt arguing for autonomous, self-managed unified working class movement to win living wages and build a breakthrough to new, better society ....
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Lucien van der Walt

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Lucien van der Walt, TV interview, 2007, on "Interface" (SABC 3), on job losses in South Africa
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Opinion: "Troubled SA must take May Day seriously" (30 Apr 2015, Sian Byrne, Warren McGregor, Lucien van der Walt)
"May Day – a call to build an international movement of working class and poor people across lines of race, nation and religion for workers’ control and democracy from below, social justice and freedom from political and economic oppression – remains critical. In a country racked by anti-immigrant violence, racial and ethnic tensions, the fragmentation of the labour federation Cosatu, corporate scandals and political corruption, it is time to remember May Day’s roots and aspirations."
This is a time to embrace working-class unity and challenge the status quo of capitalist oppression.
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Overview of labour movement and union history in South Africa, from 1880s to present.Nicole Ulrich & Lucien van der Walt, 2009, “South Africa, labor movement”, International Encyclopaedia of Revolution and Protest, Blackwell, New York, pp. 3090-3099
Nicole Ulrich and Lucien van der Walt, 2009, “South Africa, labor movement”, International Encyclopaedia of Revolution and Protest, Blackwell, New York, pp. 3090-3099 Get the PDF here South Africa,...
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Have him in circles
37 people
lekhetho mtetwa's profile photo
Sian Byrne's profile photo
Lawrence Okelo's profile photo
Sifuna Zonke's profile photo
Omer Shaukat's profile photo
Mzimkhulu Keye's profile photo
ntsika dapo's profile photo
sanda moustapha's profile photo
Warren McGregor's profile photo
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Lucien van der Walt is a prize-winning South African writer and professor of Sociology, long involved in the working class movement.
Introduction
Lucien van der Walt has published widely on labour and left history, political economy, and anarchism and syndicalism, and is involved in union education and working class movements. His books include works (with Michael Schmidt) Black Flame: The Revolutionary Class Politics of Anarchism and Syndicalism (2009), (with Steve Hirsch) the edited Anarchism and Syndicalism in the Colonial and Postcolonial World, 1880-1940: The Praxis of Class Struggle, National Liberation and Social Revolution (2010, 2014) and Negro E Vermelho: Anarquismo, sindicalismo revolucionário e pessoas de cor na África Meridional nas décadas de 1880 a 1920 (2014). His research engages the anarchist/ syndicalist tradition of Mikhail Bakunin and Peter Kropotkin; trade unionism, particularly in southern Africa; and neo-liberal state restructuring. Born in the mining town of Krugersdorp, he has a working-class family background.