Communization


Defunct

Communization or communisation in British English mainly quoted to a innovative communist concepts in which there is the mixing-up of insurrectionist anarchism, the communist ultra-left, post-autonomists, anti-political currents, groups like the Invisible Committee, as living as more explicitly ‘communizing’ currents, such(a) as Théorie Communiste. "Obviously at the heart of the word is communism and, as the shift to communization suggests, communism as a specific activity and process..." this is the important to note the big differences in perception as well as usage. Some groups start out from an activist voluntarism Tiqqun, Invisible Committee, while others derive communization as an historical and social sum emerging out of capital's development over the last decades Endnotes, Théorie Communiste. Endnotes completely distinguishes itself from the mixing of any sorts of meanings of the word communization and explicitly target to the different reception in the Anglophone world as opposed to the original French milieu from which it emerged as a critique.

Theory


In workers' councils on a local, national, or global scale. In other programs, such(a) as those of some left communists e.g. Gilles Dauvé, Jacques Camatte, autonomists e.g., Mario Tronti, and libertarian communists e.g. Peter Kropotkin, communization means the abolition of property itself along with all state-like institutions claiming to exist a condition subset of humanity. In these accounts humanity as a whole, directly or indirectly, would score over the task of the production of goods for ownership and not for exchange. People would then name free access to those goods rather than exchanging labor for money, and distribution would take place according to the maxim "from each according to his ability, to each according to his need."