In seinem den Themenschwerpunkt einleitendem Beitrag geht der Autor der Frage nach, wie die Idee der Solidarität so gefasst werden kann, dass sie nicht nur Traditionen beschwört, sondern als eine zeitgemäße und emanzipatorische Form der Auseinandersetzung mit den gegenwärtigen Verhältnissen begriffen werden kann. Dabei geht es ihm nicht allein um das voraussetzungsvolle Projekt von Solidarität im Sinne eines solchen emanzipatorischen politischen Begriffs. Vielmehr fordert er eine kritische Rückbesinnung auf das universalistische Moment von Solidarität als humaner Fähigkeit ein.
The article points out that the politics of gender equality in Germany have lost the perspective of a feminist critique within the last decades. The topic of care and reproductive work has been completely neglected, the debate is focused only on the employability of women and their integration in the national workforce. The working concept that underlies this development reproduces the separation of paid labor and reproductive work and refers women to the capitalist jobmarket, promising to find equality and liberation there. The article refers to Angela McRobbie and Nancy Fraser, it questions the narrow-minded labor-market-orientation of today's women's policy and calls for a renewal of a feminist critique of the concept of wage labor.
The article points out that the politics of gender equality in Germany have lost the perspective of a feminist critique within the last decades. The topic of care and reproductive work has been completely neglected, the debate is focused only on the employability of women and their integration in the national workforce. The working concept that underlies this development reproduces the separation of paid labor and reproductive work and refers women to the capitalist jobmarket, promising to find equality and liberation there. The article refers to Angela McRobbie and Nancy Fraser, it questions the narrow-minded labor-market-orientation of today's women's policy and calls for a renewal of a feminist critique of the concept of wage labor. Adapted from the source document.
The article examines the socio-economic and political-ideological context that provoked the renaissance of workplace recuperations in Argentina during the 1990s and in the immediate aftermath of the country's economic crisis in 2001-2002. In addition, it will discuss the emancipatory potential and the main obstacles and limitations of workers' control. While most initiatives quickly disappeared during Argentina's economic recovery in the years following the crisis, occupied and recuperated enterprises successfully emerged as the strongest and most organized form of popular protest. The workers' longstanding struggle for the recuperation of the means of production, in part, radically altered existing forms of representation and participation in the workplace. Adapted from the source document.