Towards the progressive network-system: a normative theory of organisation to achieve disruption in times of crisis
Towards the progressive network-system: a normative theory of organisation to achieve disruption in times of crisis
This article introduces the progressive network-system as a normative and descriptive theory of counter-hegemonic organisation. It is descriptive insofar as the inspiration comes from a new wave of anti-austerity leaders, movements and parties that have been less dogmatically committed to ‘horizontal’ or ‘vertical’ models of organising, and more open to flexibly combining tactics and strategies from either tradition. In summary, the ‘network’ connects supporters and activists into clusters of dissent; the ‘system’ structures them into organisational ecologies; and the ‘progressive’ ideology establishes cohesion and direction by cementing a sense of unity across the network-system. It is normative because we theorise progressive network-systems as dynamic forms of organisation dedicated to the disruption of extractive exploitation, patriarchal sexism, institutionalised racism and autocratic politics under neoliberal capitalism. We formulate six normative propositions that should inspire any progressive network-system: ideology as a cement; ‘minimal-maximalism’ as an ideological mode to enable pluralism within unity; a flexible distribution of nodes across the network; a common platform; strategic democratic planning; and empowered activism with open/distributed leadership.
92-112
Guglielmo, Marco
094ce2cd-5e7d-411a-a6f0-ff569b4c6650
Ward, Bradley
335d276e-caaf-4f83-9191-d031f5bb759b
1 April 2024
Guglielmo, Marco
094ce2cd-5e7d-411a-a6f0-ff569b4c6650
Ward, Bradley
335d276e-caaf-4f83-9191-d031f5bb759b
Guglielmo, Marco and Ward, Bradley
(2024)
Towards the progressive network-system: a normative theory of organisation to achieve disruption in times of crisis.
Global Political Economy, 3 (1), .
(doi:10.1332/26352257Y2024D000000008).
Abstract
This article introduces the progressive network-system as a normative and descriptive theory of counter-hegemonic organisation. It is descriptive insofar as the inspiration comes from a new wave of anti-austerity leaders, movements and parties that have been less dogmatically committed to ‘horizontal’ or ‘vertical’ models of organising, and more open to flexibly combining tactics and strategies from either tradition. In summary, the ‘network’ connects supporters and activists into clusters of dissent; the ‘system’ structures them into organisational ecologies; and the ‘progressive’ ideology establishes cohesion and direction by cementing a sense of unity across the network-system. It is normative because we theorise progressive network-systems as dynamic forms of organisation dedicated to the disruption of extractive exploitation, patriarchal sexism, institutionalised racism and autocratic politics under neoliberal capitalism. We formulate six normative propositions that should inspire any progressive network-system: ideology as a cement; ‘minimal-maximalism’ as an ideological mode to enable pluralism within unity; a flexible distribution of nodes across the network; a common platform; strategic democratic planning; and empowered activism with open/distributed leadership.
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Accepted/In Press date: 18 January 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 26 February 2024
Published date: 1 April 2024
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Local EPrints ID: 494840
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494840
PURE UUID: 63da4d26-00e2-4a73-a522-b2f9a8925bb9
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Date deposited: 17 Oct 2024 16:35
Last modified: 05 Feb 2025 03:17
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Author:
Marco Guglielmo
Author:
Bradley Ward
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