Rick Turner, Participatory Democracy and Workers’ Control
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Date
2017-06-01
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Abstract
This article considers the contribution of radical South African philosopher Rick Turner to theories of ‘workers’ control’. Turner’s philosophical work, especially his book, The Eye of the Needle (1972), posited the workplace as a fundamental site of ‘participatory democracy’ and a space for the potential radical transformation of South African society. During the early 1970s, Turner’s philosophical writings, teaching at the University of Natal, and political activism in Durban helped galvanise a cohort of radical white students who joined in support of protesting black workers in the 1973 Durban mass strikes. The confluence of Turner’s ideas about workers’ control, the students’ activism, and the collective action of the black working class gave South Africa’s labour movement a radically democratic, shop-floor orientation that deserves a revival in the new South Africa.
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This record is for a(n) postprint of an article published in Theoria on 2017-06-01; the version of record is available at https://doi.org/10.3167/th.2017.6415107.
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Citation
Lichtenstein, Alex. "Rick Turner, Participatory Democracy and Workers’ Control." Theoria, vol. 64, no. 151, 2017-6-1, https://doi.org/10.3167/th.2017.6415107.
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Theoria