Crisis Culture and the Waning of Revolutionary
Politics
Since the “election” of George Bush in 2000 (and
his “re-election” in 2004), the tragedy of 9/11, the
US invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq in 2001 and 2003 respectively,
and ever more indicators of human-induced global climate change,
the crisis in the social and natural worlds has sharpened considerably.
The deterioration of society and nature demands a profound, systematic,
and radical political response, yet in recent decades Left opposition
movements have grown weaker in proportion to their importance.
As the globe spirals ever deeper into disaster, with all things
becoming ever more tightly knit into the tentacles of global capitalism,
and as oppositional voices propose programs of reform and moderation
at best, there is an urgent need for new conceptual and political
maps and compasses to help steer humanity into a viable mode of
existence. Karl Marx's 1843 call for a "ruthless criticism
of everything existing" has never been more pressing and
profound than in contemporary times of predatory global capitalism,
neoliberalism, the World Trade Organization (WTO), the North American
Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), the demise of social democracies,
the police states of George Bush and Tony Blair, the assault on
liberties and the criminalization of dissent, species extinction,
rainforest destruction, resource wars, and global warming.
Given the advances of capitalism and the cooptation and retreat
of radical politics, it is urgent that genuine oppositional viewpoints
be kept alive and nurtured in intellectual, public, and political
forums. When one considers the paucity of radical viewpoints that
still survive, the project of Inclusive Democracy immediately
comes to mind as one of the few, if not the only, coherent and
comprehensive theoretical and political frameworks for systemic
social change. Inclusive Democracy aims to develop a radical theoretical
analysis of ? and political solution to ? the catastrophic social
and environmental impact of the market economies spawned by Western
capitalist nations. This approach is inclusive in two senses.
First, it seeks to transform all realms of public life, economic,
political, legal, cultural, educational, and so on. Second, it
aims to incorporate a wide diversity of social voices (or at least
those legitimate expressions of difference not dedicated to ending
difference and democracy by imposing authoritarian, elite, and
fascist systems onto others) into revitalized public spheres.
It is a form of direct democracy in its synthesis of classical
Greek and libertarian socialist outlooks, a perspective that seeks
to abolish all hierarchies and dissolve power into confederated
local direct, economic, social and ecological democracies.
Cultures in Crisis
The Inclusive Democracy project was developed in the 1990s by
Takis Fotopoulos in the pages of Society and Nature and Democracy
and Nature. These journals were dedicated to analyzing the broad
social crisis, the ecological crisis, and their interrelationships.
In 1997, Fotopoulos systematized his ideas in a landmark work
entitled, Towards An Inclusive Democracy: The Crisis of the Growth
Economy and the Need for a New Liberatory Project (London/New
York: Cassell/ Continuum)[1]. The international character and
influence of Inclusive Democracy is evident in the publication
of Fotopoulos’ book in Italian, Greek, French, Latin American,
and German editions (with Chinese and Arab editions also on the
way), and debates and contributions generated by theorists throughout
Europe, the UK, the US, and Latin America.[2]
The immense crisis that Inclusive Democracy seeks to analyze
and solve is two-fold, defining both the realities of global capitalism
and the numerous failed attempts to oppose it. Inclusive Democracy
theorizes a multidimensional crisis (political, economic, social,
ecological, and cultural) in the objective world which sharpened
after World War II. Fuelled by new forms of science and technology,
military expansion, and aggressive colonization of Southern nations,
capitalism evolved into a truly global system, one inspired by
neoliberal visions of nations as open free markets that flow and
grow without restrictions and regulations, driven by multinational
corporations such as ExxonMobil and Monsanto, anchored in transnational
institutions and courts like the WTO, and homogenizing nations
into a single economic organism though arrangements such as NAFTA.
As formulated by Fotopoulos, and developed in dialogue with radical
theorists throughout the world, the Inclusive Democracy project
considers the ultimate cause of the present multidimensional crisis
to be the concentration of economic and political power in the
hands of various elites. This power is maintained and reproduced
by the dynamics of the global market economy and its political
complement, “representative democracy” – a mystification
that Fotopoulos dismisses as a form of “liberal technocracy”
which disempowers citizens in the name of representing their interests.
Yet, where one might expect this multifaceted crisis to generate
an appropriate political response, another crisis has formed.
Theoretical and political opposition to global capitalism –
in any significant and truly radical form embodying democratic
social and political alternatives ? has collapsed. Elitism, bureaucratic
domination, and the destruction of nature was grotesquely replayed
in various “communist” or “socialist”
states that intended or alleged to present an “alternative”
to capitalist systems. The European tradition of Social Democracy,
dating back to Edward Bernstein and the German Social Democratic
Party in the early 20th century, presented itself as an alternative
to both capitalism and bureaucratic socialism, but unavoidably
succumbed to the failed logic of reformism that attempted to repair
rather than radically transform a system with inherent structural
flaws. Social Democracy mounted no effective alternative or opposition
and today is little but a museum piece amidst increasing the privatization
and market domination of European nation states.
Inclusive Democracy seeks to show how the discourse of democracy
has been distorted and perverted in order to build empires, dig
graveyards, and wage wars in the name of “freedom, democracy,
and progress” – three of the most distorted concepts
in the modern lexicon, to which in the post-9/11 era we must also
add “security.” Yet no discourse or concept is more
important today than that of democracy, and so Fotopoulos tries
to clarify its real meaning and redeem the concept from limitless
forms of corruption. In Western “liberal” form, for
instance, Fotopoulos notes that “democracy has become a
spectator sport in which the general public chooses sides among
contending groups of experts.”[3] It is urgent, he insists,
to recover the authentic meaning of democracy, such as relates
to autonomy, citizenship, education, and the self-management of
people.
Since the 1960s, more current forms of critique and resistance
have emerged, but none proved to be significant or enduring forces
of opposition and radical change. From the “new social movements”
and subsequent “identity politics” formations (feminism,
civil rights, gay and lesbian liberation, multiculturalism, anti-nuclear
groups, and so on) to apolitical, reformist, and esoteric postmodernism;
from the Green movement to the mystical tendencies of deep ecology,
Fotopoulos finds organizations and political expressions that
are reformist, subjectivist, irrational, or coopted, leaving a
barren political scene devoid of significant resistance to ever-destructive
forms of capitalist domination. Beginning in the 1990s, a far
more promising approach – variously described as “anti-globalization,
“alter-globalization,” or “globalization from
below” (as opposed to “globalization from above”)
? has emerged to challenge transnational capitalism. Unlike the
fragmentary nature of identity politics, alter-globalization movements
often advance radical visions and have crossed various political
lines and geographical boundaries to form alliances against global
capitalism. While recognizing potential in these movements, Fotopoulos
nonetheless finds that they lack an “anti-systemic”
perspective (i.e., a holistic and radical critique of the totality
of capitalist systems) and viable democratic alternative to market
domination and manifold social hierarchies.
For Fotopoulos, a truly “radical” or “anti-systemic”
viewpoint has a social not individual emphasis. It upholds the
importance of rational debate and criticism over mystical and
subjective turns, avoids utopian fantasies in order to focus on
real challenges and possibilities for change, links environmental
problems to social and political problems, and understands capitalism
and hierarchical social systems as interrelated problems that
require overarching and coherent solutions. Moreover, such a standpoint
insists on the crucial importance of articulating compelling alternatives
to capitalism and of building transitional strategies. Its key
objective is to tackle the most crucial and basic problem of all
? the unequal distribution of political and economic power ? and
to solve it in favour of genuine democracy, rather than leaving
corrosive and destructive arrangements intact so that the social
and ecological crisis can deepen still further.
Where some people concede defeat, others declare this to be the
best of all possible worlds (I'd hate to see the worst) with the
entrenchment of Western “liberal democracy” (Francis
Fukuyama). And while these self-ascribed prophets announce the
“end of history” with the “death of the masses”
(Jean Baudrillard), others fight for meaningless reforms and lesser
evils (liberals, labor bureaucrats, democrats, et. al.). Against
the prevailing forms of complacency and nihilism, one of the first
conditions of change is the realization that things could and
must be profoundly different than as organized by the prevailing
social prisms/prisons. Whereas Inclusive Democracy diagnoses crises,
one of the gravest and most fundamental problems today is a crisis
of the political imagination. Social critique and change in the
slaughterhouse of global capitalism needs to be guided and informed
by powerful descriptions of what is ? the degraded forfeiture
of human potential in a world where over a billion people struggle
for mere existence. But social transformation must also be inspired
by bold new visions of what can be, by imaginative projections
of how human beings might harmoniously relate to one another and
the living/dying earth.
Radicals such as Herbert Marcuse and Murray Bookchin have recognized
that so-called "utopian" visions are not ? when authentic
? starry-eyed dreams of abstract ideals, but rather can be empirically
grounded in actual social tendencies and existing potential for
a rational, egalitarian, and ecological society. It must be emphasized,
however, that Inclusive Democracy explicitly differentiates itself
from the “objective” rationalism of the Enlightenment,
such as both Marcuse and Bookchin adopt, since “the project
for a democratic society cannot be grounded on an evolutionary
process of social change, either a teleological one (such as Marx’s
dialectical materialism) or a non-teleological one (such as Bookchin’s
dialectical naturalism).”[4]
Still, as Fotopoulos emphasizes “the fact that no grand
evolutionary schemes of Progress are supported by History does
not mean that we should overemphasise the significance of the
‘social imaginary’ (in the Castoriadian terminology)
at the expense of the ‘systemic’ elements.’”[5]
On this basis, the Inclusive Democracy project sees History “as
the continuous interaction between creative human action and the
existing institutional framework, i.e. as the interaction between
the ‘imaginary’ and the ‘systemic’ elements,
the outcome of which is always unpredictable.”[6] Similarly,
Inclusive Democracy envisions a true democratic society to be
“ a rupture, a break in the historical continuity that the
heteronomous society has historically established.”[7]
The Genealogy of Marketization
Beginning with the premise that capitalism is a grow-or-die system
antithetical to democracy, human needs, and ecological sustainability,
Fotopoulos provides a valuable overview of the restructuring of
global capitalism. In his genealogy of the modern state and economy,
he traces the “marketization” process (which transforms
all goods and services into commodities as it transmogrifies the
citizen into the consumer) through three phases: liberal, statist,
and neoliberal. In the classic liberal stage, the market became
separated from society for the first time in history, as competition
within capitalist nations played out with little or no social
control. In the statist stage, which in the U.S. emerged after
the depression of the 1930s, the economy is partially managed
by the state, and social welfare institutions are set in place.
Finally, in the current neoliberal stage, which unfolded rapidly
since the recent internationalization of the market economy and
the conservative revolutions in Britain and the U.S. during the
1980s, marketization processes increasingly are universalized
and the long-sought goal of the maximal role of the market and
minimal role of the state is attained.
On Fotopoulos' reading, because of the growing globalization
of the market economy and the triumph of commodity logic, capitalism
has already passed through its "statist" phase of organization,
where nation states intervened in the market in order to control
its crisis tendencies and fashioned a social welfare state designed
to secure full employment and allocate resources to those most
in need. Forebodingly, Fotopoulos argues that the neoliberal stage
is not merely a temporary phenomenon, but rather represents "the
political consequence of structural changes in the market economy
system that could lead to the completion of the marketization
process ? a historical process that was merely interrupted by
the statist phase."[8] Marketization dynamics have knitted
capitalist nations into a global system dominated by institutions
such as NAFTA, the European Union (EU), the Association of South-East
Asian nations (ASEAN), the Southern Cone Common Market in Latin
America (MERCOSUS), and the WTO. Nations still have interests
and powers independent from transnational forces, but Fotopoulos
insists that in a global competition among various economic blocs,
this role is diminishing, while citizenship and democracy themselves
slide into decline.
The implications of the neoliberal stage of capitalist marketization
are enormous, as capitalism co-opts and defeats its enemies and
thereby perfects itself through the autonomization of the economy
from society. According to Fotopoulos, "A neoliberal consensus
has swept over the advanced capitalist world and has replaced
the social-democratic consensus of the early post-war period."[9]
Not only have "existing socialist societies" been negated
in the global triumph of capitalism (and Fotopoulos provides a
lengthy and acute analysis of how socialist statism mirrored its
capitalist “other” and dissolved through its own contradictions),
so too have social democratic movements.
In support of this thesis, Fotopoulos observes that national
governments such as Sweden increasingly have abandoned government
regulation of the economy and attempts to provide effective social
services, while social democratic parties themselves ignore or
parody the social dimensions of their tradition in favor of neoliberal
policies. If statism is now obsolete, the social democratic project
becomes unrealizable and there cannot even be moderate reforms
able to withstand the assault of privatization and demand to conform
to global market imperatives. Thus, Fotopolous insists, "no
national government today may follow economic policies that are
disapproved by the capital markets, which have the power to create
an intolerable economic pressure on the respective country's borrowing
ability, currency value and investment flows."[10] Every
“socialist” leader who has tried to maintain an effective
social welfare system or any kind of protectionist policies ?
whether Francois Mitterrand in France or George Papandreou in
Greece ? has been forced to surrender to transnational capitalist
policies or be completely bulldozed by the juggernaut of marketization.[11]
Thus, Fotopoulos diagnoses troubled conditions where both bureaucratic
socialist countries and social democracies have failed to overturn
capitalism, let alone to reform it in any enduring and substantive
way. Fotopoulos shows how Marx himself fetishized growth, industrialism,
and science and technology (which Marx argued would almost automatically
bring human liberation when fully developed), and how Marxists
and dependency theorists alike fail to challenge the socially
and ecologically destructive logic of a growth-oriented economy.
In Towards an Inclusive Democracy, the consequences of such a
system become staggeringly clear when Fotopoulos takes the reader
on a tour of Southern nations caught in the ravaging grip of debt,
export, structural adjustment programs, poverty, hunger, disease,
and environmental degradation, all of which he argues are inevitable
consequences and by-products of neoliberal policies.[12]
Fotopoulos relates a crucial grand narrative of the life and
death of social democracy and Leftist traditions, a story that
is quite different from the metanarrative rightly criticized by
Jean-Francois Lyotard and other postmodernists.[13] For whereas
a grand narrative is an empirically-grounded story of social change,
a metanarrative is a metaphysical tale of unfolding social improvement
and perfection. With postmodernists, Fotopoulos criticizes metanarratives
as ideological mystifications that promote the modern ideology
of Progress as attained through the development of science, technology,
free markets, and the cult of expertise. Fotopoulos is relentless
in his criticism of the unregulated (by society at large rather
than only by elites) advance of these forces and the catastrophic
social and environmental impact of economic growth and profit
imperatives. He shows that the Western tradition of “heteronomy
(i.e. the tradition of non-questioning of existing laws, traditions
and beliefs that in a hierarchical society guarantee the concentration
of political and economic power in the hands of elites), has never
in fact led to a tradition of autonomy, and that the forms of
freedom and democracy created remained partial, distorted, and
wholly inadequate to the social forms human beings require for
an autonomous existence with one another and a viable existence
with the natural world.
Unlike most postmodernists, however, Fotopoulos describes the
current global situation as one of advanced capitalism, as a new
form of modernity, rather than as a vague and rootless “postmodernity.”
Whereas postmodernists emphasize breaks and discontinuties, Fotopoulos
highlights the continuity of the last few centuries of capitalist
social development in terms of privatization and market domination.[14]
And whereas postmodernists typically espouse a relativism that
disables normative and political criticism, Fotopoulos insists
that ethical and political values can be grounded in non-arbitrary
conditions. As he points out, “the type of general relativism,
which is adopted by post-modernism, simply expresses the latter's
abandonment of any critique of the institutionalised social reality
and a general retreat to conformism.”[15] Moreover, as he
stresses in another passage, “once we have made a choice
among the main traditions, in other words, once we have defined
the content of the liberatory project in terms of the autonomy
tradition, certain important implications follow at the ethical
level, as well as at the interpretational level”[16]—a
position that rules out any kind of subjectivist arbitrariness.[17]
Fotopoulos rejects the individualism and fragmented identity politics
of multiculturalists and postmodernists in favor of emphasizing
the need for social-institutional change and a global anti-capitalist
politics of alliance. Finally, Fotopoulos finds that some explicit
attempts at postmodern politics, such as the “radical democracy”
of Ernesto Laclau and Chantal Mouffe, are simply fetid reformist
wine repackaged in shiny new theoretical bottles.[18] Despite
its one-time flair and flourish, postmodernism, for Fotopoulos,
is just another dead-end road unable to carry humanity toward
democracy and autonomy over and against domination and heteronomy.
The Road to Democracy
Either the vision of a radical democracy must die, and we acquiesce
to something like Fukuyama's notion of the "end of history"
(i.e., the triumph of capitalism at the alleged endgame of human
moral and political evolution), or we radically reconstruct the
democratic project.[19] Fotopoulos of course takes the latter
path, unwavering in his insistence that reform and social democratic
projects are obsolete and doomed to failure. Given the power of
neoliberal, neoconservative, reformist, and pseudo-subversive
ideologies, much debris has to be cleared out of the way, and
thus Fotopoulos critically engages Social Democracy, communitarianism,
deep ecology, postmodernism, Greens, and various alter-globalization
approaches.
In his examination, Fotopoulos finds various competing political
perspectives to be both "ahistorical and utopian." They
are ahistorical in that they fail to recognize the magnitude of
the neoliberal restructuration of capital (and typically replicate
its individualist and market-based ideologies). And they are utopian
because they ignore the grow-or-die logic of the market economy,
the universalization of this process, and the irreversibility
of the post-statist phase of capitalist reconstruction which nullifies
any attempt to return to social democracy policies for state protection
of labor, various social groups, and the environment. The irony,
Fotopoulos observes, is that Social Democracy and reform approaches
in general are the real “utopian” project, because
these perspectives believe that meaningful changes can emerge
within neoliberal institutions that are antithetical to anything
but crass market objectives and brute power politics. Inclusive
Democracy, however, frankly recognizes the need for the complete
transformation of the global capitalist system, as well as to
offer concrete alternatives and proposals for rebuilding society
along the lies of autonomy and ecology.
Fotopoulos draws inspiration from the classical democratic tradition
which was born in classical Athens and libertarian socialism,
along with their theorization by, among others, Castoriadis’
autonomy project, and Bookchin’s social ecology/communalist
project. Also engaging various modern social movements (radical
Green, libertarian, feminist), Fotopoulos seeks to develop a new
liberatory synthesis. On the hypothesis (argued throughout the
first part of Towards an Inclusive Democracy) that inequality
and hierarchy are the sources of crises in culture, politics,
economics, and ecology, Fotopoulos seeks the abolition of the
unequal distribution of political and economic power, as well
as the elimination of all hierarchical relations in society.
Fotopoulos shows that the new democracy is necessary, given the
multidimensional nature of the crisis which stems from the concentration
of economic power that inevitably results from a market economy
and its attendant "representative democracy." He also
suggests some key institutional preconditions that can be constructed
to abolish concentrated systems of power. Only in, decentralized,
self-governing, interconnected communities can individuals realize
the necessary and sufficient conditions of an inclusive democracy
(conditions which Fotopoulos notes never have been realized historically),
since only on a local scale can people participate meaningfully
in society as citizens and attain "demotic" (or, community)
ownership of productive resources and govern their allocation.
Post-capitalist society, sprung from the political and cultural
organization for a new economy and polity, begins with the transformation
of city governments into inclusive democracies and their linkage
into confederations.
Since political democracy requires economic democracy (as money
creates hierarchies and controls votes), the contemporary liberation
project must be rooted in a new theory of economics. Key to Fotopoulos'
political position is the assertion that "the objective of
a new liberatory project should not merely be the abolition of
capitalist property relations but that of the market economy itself."[20]
Whereas emphasis on confederalism is common among social anarchists
and left libertarians, a distinguishing feature of Fotopoulos'
analysis is his concrete emphasis on producing and exchanging
goods in a non-market economy and democratically allocating scare
resources in a way that reconciles the social and individual dimensions
of human life. This is what makes economic democracy necessary
in the Inclusive Democracy project, in contrast to anarchists
and social ecologists who, starting from an objective definition
of human needs, believe in the communist myth of a “post-scarcity”
society (rightly criticised by Hannah Arendt) in which no problem
of democratic allocation of resources arises. Fotopoulos’
approach therefore radically differs from Bookchin's notion of
a "post-scarcity" anarchism and the economics of social
ecology,[21] which he criticizes for lacking specifics on alternative
economics and systems of resource allocation (which Bookchin phrases
in the vague terms of a new "moral economy").[22]
Fotopoulos rejects attempts to reconcile capitalism and socialism
by creating a "mixed economy" or market institutions
democratically governed. For Fotopoulos, a "socialist market"
is an oxymoron, since markets are growth mechanisms and commodity
logic breeds uncontrollable expansion. Seeking to meet fundamental
aims in satisfying human needs (both essential and non-essential)
and to synthesize collective and individual decision making, Fotopoulos
roots his vision of a decommodified economy in a voucher system.[23]
There would be a social allocation of work, along with rotating
functions, where necessary.[24] By placing heavy emphasis on freedom
of choice and localized institutions, this theory differs significantly
from socialist views of "economic democracy" and “participatory
economics”[25] that fail to minimize the dangers of a new
bureaucratic system of planning emerging.
No theory will be convincing if it does not offer realistic alternatives
to the present set of arrangements that are so entrenched as to
seem unshakeable or subject only to minor improvements. Thus,
as Fotopoulos emphasizes: "all the proposed strategies for
political and economic change and the transitional projects involved
are useless unless they are part of a comprehensive program for
social transformation that explicitly aims at replacing the market
economy and statist democracy by an inclusive democracy."[26]
Fotopoulos offers positive, constructive, and fairly detailed
visions of how the future can come about and what it might look
like, while trying to avoid the problem of dogmatism dictating
to the future what its society should be.
Thus, Inclusive Democracy seeks to construct a new form of decentralized
democracy based on confederations of local inclusive democracies.
This approach aims to reintegrate society with economy, polity,
and nature by striving to achieve the equal distribution of power
at all levels. Such a society can exist only in contradiction
with capitalist institutions, rather than in compromise or accommodation
to it. Inclusive Democracy seeks a break and rupture with capitalism,
technocracy, bureaucratic domination, and, indeed, the entire
classist, statist, and heteronomy tradition of the Western world.
The primary values of Inclusive Democracy are autonomy (in the
original sense of the word that involves “self rule”)
and democracy (the direct rule of citizens over their social life).
For Fotopoulos, democracy has only one genuine meaning, and this
entails the active involvement of informed citizens in the regulation
of their own lives, without mediation of “experts”
or elites of any kind.
Equally as important to the vision of a new society is a theory
of how to get there, or, a transitional strategy. Fotopoulos opposes
the Marxist-Leninist insurrectionist vision of precipitating a
sudden and cataclysmic “revolution.” One problem with
this approach is that change unfolds too rapidly and new objective
conditions are brought about without appropriate new subjective
conditions. Moreover, this method invariably depends on a “vanguard”
concept that involves elitism and authoritarianism, and thereby
is a betrayal of progressive political ideals of equality and
democracy. Through the critical education method of paideia and
actual experience with building democracy, Inclusive Democracy
envisions a manner in which people can create vital democracies
uncontaminated with elitism and the cult of expertise. Against
the criticism that people are fundamentally lazy, apathetic, and
apolitical, Fotopoulos argues that people are capable of building
democracies, new social forms they will identify with, value,
and thus defend against inevitable reaction and counter-attacks.
As for the ever-present threat of violence, Fotopoulos claims
that it will be a real threat only when it is too late, already
after the democratic “paradigm” would have become
hegemonic in the Gramscian sense. These new democratic communities,
of course, will be constructed in as many local bases as possible,
but they must ultimately be interconnected into federations at
the national and international levels. Just as “socialism
in one country”, “Inclusive Democracy in one country”
is an oxymoron, for capitalism is global and isolated communities
are highly vulnerable.
Thus, in place of antiquated and problematic visions of insurrection,
convulsive revolution, and storming the barricades (or centers
of power that no longer exist in a rhizomatic global capitalist
world), Inclusive Democracy emphasizes the need for preparatory
transitions. To be sure, the radical vision here is optimistic,
but it is grounded in existing historical possibilities and concrete
ideas for new social forms. Fotopoulos believes that a revolutionary
project is "realistic" to the extent local economic
and political bases of Inclusive Democracy can take root, interconnect,
nourish new cultures and subjectivities, and win over a majority
of the population. Subsequently, "an alternative social paradigm
will have become hegemonic and the break in the socialization
process ... will have occurred."[27]
Fotopoulos' vision, then, is creating and securing a counter-hegemonic
inclusive democratic culture, stage-by-stage, until a new global
economic, political, and cultural order is achieved. He offers
a resolute, militant, holistic insistence on the need to negate
hierarchies and power structures in order to comprehensively rebuild
society from below: "Town by town, city by city, region by
region will be taken away from the effective control of the market
economy and the nation-state, their political and economic structures
being replaced by the confederations of democratically run communities."[28]
Fotopoulos offers the kind of radical insights to be truly visionary,
to be “utopian” in the best sense of the term which
seeks to identify existing potentialities for systemic change.
Inclusive Democracy thereby is not the u-topos of a non-society
that cannot possibly exist, but rather the eu-topos of a good
society existing in potential, to be born through radical struggle
in building a new democratic society. The approach of Inclusive
Democracy shows that humankind must find a way beyond the Charybdis
of an internationalized capitalism and the Scylla of socialist
statism, between the false options of individualism and collectivism.
Inclusive Democracy maps out a third way, one predicated on building
a federation of self-organized political and economic institutions
at local levels. With no guarantee of success, and few historical
examples of genuine democracies, the Inclusive Democracy project
is an experiment in human possibilities.
Whatever choices human beings make, they are not capricious;
steering clear of the false dilemma of objectivism and relativism,
Fotopoulos’ Toward an Inclusive Democracy brings into play
some elaborate philosophical machinery to demonstrate that while
human choices cannot be justified or "proven" through
appeal to divine mandates, historical "laws," or “objective
tendencies,” neither are they arbitrary or of equal value.
Laying claim to freedom as the highest human value, the task becomes
to justify it as such, work through its implications, and struggle
for the institutional mechanisms best able to realize it. .
The Need for a Renewed Radicalism
Critics may disagree with key particulars and assumptions of
Fotopoulos’ theory, but nonetheless concur, in this era
of severe social and ecological crisis, that without the kind
of revolutionary changes envisioned by Inclusive Democracy, the
future will become increasingly bleak. The social and environmental
crises haunting global capitalism inevitably will deepen and darken,
as evidenced in the disastrous US invasions of Afghanistan and
Iraq, the fascist administrations of George Bush and Tony Blair,
failed neoliberal projects for spreading “democracy”
to the Middle East, struggles over diminishing resources such
as oil and water, “terrorism” and increasingly volatile
geopolitical conflicts, global climate change, and environmental
chaos such as portended by the destructive power of Hurricane
Katrina.
More than ever before, the choice for humanity is between libertarian
socialism and barbarism, democracy or authoritarianism, sustainability
or collapse. In the audacious vision of Inclusive Democracy, the
goal must be to create what never existed before, but which is
more necessary than ever if there is to be a viable future whatsoever
? a direct, decentralized, confederal democracy, one that aims
to reintegrate society with economy, polity and nature by striving
to achieve the equal distribution of power at all levels.
[1] A concise version of the book is online at: http://www.inclusivedemocracy.org/fotopoulos/brbooks/multi_crisis_id/multi_crisis_id.htm
[2] See also the entry on Inclusive Democracy in The Routledge
Encyclopaedia of International Political Economy, 2001.
[3] "The Inclusive Democracy Project – A Rejoinder",
Takis Fotopoulos, Democracy and Nature, (Vol.9 No.3, November
2003), p 436.
[4] Takis Fotopoulos, "The ID project and Social Ecology",
The International Journal of Inclusive Democracy, (Vol.1 No.3,
May 2005)
[5] ibid.
[6] ibid.
[7] ibid.
[8] Toward an Inclusive Democracy, p.145.
[9] Toward an Inclusive Democracy, p. 39.
[10] Toward an Inclusive Democracy, p. 42.
[11] On the collapse and defeat of Social Democracy and Eurocommunism,
see Carl Boggs, Social Movements and Political Power (Philadelphia:
Temple University Press, 1986). One recent example of the cooptation
of Left resistance through neoliberal ideologies and global capitalist
structures involves the return to power of former Sandinista leader
and President of Nicaragua, Daniel Ortega. An avowed enemy of
the US and capitalism in the late 1970s and early 1980s (before
the US destabilized the country by funding fascist “contra”
forces), Ortega was re-elected President in November 2006, but
this time ditching Marxist-Leninist posturing to affirm global
markets as key to national prosperity. See “Ortega, Again,”
The New York Times, November 11, 2006.
[12] Toward an Inclusive Democracy, pp. 110-139
[13] On this distinction, see Steven Best and Douglas Kellner,
Postmodern Theory: Critical Interrogations (New York: Guilford
Press, 1991).
[14] One significant counterexample to this would be David Harvey’s
The Condition of Postmodernity: An Enquiry into the Origins of
Cultural Change (Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 1991), which roots
postmodern analysis and historical periodization in political
economy and social theory. In this vein, also see the trilogy
of postmodern works by Steven Best and Douglas Kellner, Postmodern
Theory: Critical Interrogations; The Postmodern Turn: Paradigms
Shifts in Art, Theory, and Science (Guilford Press, 1997), and
The Postmodern Adventure: Science, Technology, and Cultural Studies
at the Third Millennium (Guilford Press, 2001).
[15] Fotopoulos, Toward an Inclusive Democracy, p.348.
[16] Ibid.
[17] see Takis Fotopoulos, "Towards a democratic liberatory
ethics", Democracy & Nature, (Vol.8 No.3, November 2002)
[18] Ernesto Laclau and Chantal Mouffe, Hegemony and Socialist
Strategy: Toward a Radical Democratic Politics (London: Verso
Press, 2001).
[19] Francis Fukuyama, The End of History and the Last Man (New
York: Harper Perennial, 1993).
[20] Toward an Inclusive Democracy, p. 6.
[21] See Janet Biehl, The Politics of Social Ecology (Montreal:
Black Rose Press, 1998), Chapter 12.
[22] See Murray Bookchin, Post-Scarcity Anarchism (Oakland, CA:
AK Press, 2004).
[23] Toward an Inclusive Democracy, pp. 257-262.
[24] Toward an Inclusive Democracy, pp. 262-6.
[25] See Takis Fotopoulos, "Participatory Economics (Parecon)
and Inclusive Democracy", The International Journal of Inclusive
Democracy, (Vol.1 No.2, January 2005)
[26] Toward an Inclusive Democracy, p. 275.
[27]Toward an Inclusive Democracy, p. 285.
[28] Toward an Inclusive Democracy, p. 285.
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