Worker Control and Workplace Democracy. An Alternative Labour History
Over the past 135 years, in all kinds of historical situations and  during various political and economic crises and in different political  systems, workers have taken control of their workplaces. Yet this story  of workers self-administered production is rarely told. Capitalists,  bourgeois governments and administrators of systems based on the  exploitation of workers usually have little interest in disseminating  the history of self-organized workers; those who have successfully run  factories without bosses. In the early 20th century workers tried to  gain control over production in social and socialist revolutions, like  those in Austria, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Russia and Spain, and under  state socialism, as in Yugoslavia, Poland or Hungary; they did so as  well in anti- colonial struggles and democratic revolutions in  Argentina, Algeria, Indonesia and Portugal, to just name a few examples.  Factory take-overs by workers and the perspective of workers’ control  was also present in labor struggles against capitalist restructuring in  the last third of the 20th century in France, Self-Administration,  Autonomy, State Socialism, Union, Council Democracy, Crisis,  Cooperatives
 the UK, Italy, Canada, Australia and elsewhere. Company occupations and  workers’ self-administration have again manifested themselves strongly  since the 1990s in Argentina and in many parts of South America, as well  as in India and some European countries. Workers and communities have  recuperated hundreds of factories and companies contending against the  consequences of global capitalist crises (Ness & Azzellini 2011).  What can be seen from all these examples is a common struggle of workers  for the democratic control of production. They show how, even without  knowledge of previous worker control initiatives or an explicit  socialist consciousness, the collective administration of workplaces has  frequently emerged as an inherent tendency among the rank and file.  Workers’ councils and assemblies discuss, decide and work in a  horizontal and directly democratic way. In the long run workers’ control  has not been able to impose itself on a large scale. Media and expert  discourses often suggest that the many problems worker-controlled  companies faced internally were the reason for their failure. But  despite all claims that workers’ control is not viable or the supposed  loss of enthusiasm of workers and the adverse conditions of the  capitalist context surrounding them, workers’ control almost always  failed because of the threat or use of violent repression.
 This illustrates that workers’ control in production is only one  necessary step for transforming society and moving towards overcoming  capitalism and »the exploitation of men by men« (as Marx said: today we  would say »men and women«). In order to create a perspective for  overcoming capitalism it
 is indispensable to gain control of production. But revolutionary  organization and self- administration must be extended to all areas of  society to be able to consolidate the transformation process needed. […]
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