Communalist Guide Ep 2: Dialectics of Individual and Collective Autonomy | discussion | Urdu
This is a deep discussion on four types of properties in a communalist commune.
This discussion is based on core text: Ecology of Freedom by Murray Bookchin
This discussion is based on source text: Ecology of Freedom by Murray Bookchin
This discussion is based on source text: Ecology of Freedom by Murray Bookchin
how to build ground up communes
This discussion is based on the text: Conquest of Violence: The Gandhian Philosophy of Conflict by Joan Valerie Bondurant
Nonviolent socialism
All references to claims made during discussion can be found in the source text: Guillotine at Work by Maximov
References to all claims made within discussion can be found in the source text: Guillotine at Work by Maximov
All references to the claims can be found within source text used for this discussion: Guillotine at Work by Maximov
The source text is Guillotine at Work by Maximov
References and citations for all claims can be found within the source book.
The source text for this discussion is Guillotine at Work by Maximov
References to all claims made can be found within the book!
Source text is Guillotine at Work by Maximov
The source "Re-Imagining Justice: From Punitive to Transformative" by Pranav Jeevan P critiques India's current punitive justice system, highlighting its overcrowding, high number of undertrial prisoners, and disproportionate impact on marginalized communities. The author argues that this system perpetuates social inequities rather than resolving them. Instead, the paper advocates for a shift towards restorative and transformative justice models. While restorative justice focuses on victim needs and repairing harm, transformative justice aims to address the systemic and structural causes of violence, such as patriarchy, caste oppression, and capitalism, advocating for prison abolition through community investment and addressing root causes rather than simply punishment. Ultimately, the text proposes that genuine justice requires dismantling coercive systems and investing in alternatives that foster healing and prevent harm.
Prisons: A Social Crime and Failure by Emma Goldman