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Urban political economy This chapter makes a case for conceiving urban economies as, always, urban political economies. While cities are customarily seen as sites having intrinsic characteristics of economic dynamism, this c...

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Urban political economy This chapter makes a case for conceiving urban economies as, always, urban political economies. While cities are customarily seen as sites having intrinsic characteristics of economic dynamism, this chapter argues that urban economies do not simply

#Municipalism Urban political economy

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Social infrastructure in diverse and unequal cities: Examining Civic Management facilities in Barcelona This article offers a nuanced exploration of the notion of social infrastructure and its capacity to foster encounters and strengthen social ties in urban contexts. Focusing on Civic Management Facili...

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Social infrastructure in diverse and unequal cities: Examining Civic Management facilities in Barcelona This article offers a nuanced exploration of the notion of social infrastructure and its capacity to foster encounters and strengthen social ties in urban contexts. Focusing on Civic Management Facilities in Barcelona-municipally owned and funded

Social infrastructure in diverse and unequal cities: Examining Civic Management facilities in Barcelona #Municipalism

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Behavioural nudges in circular economy transitions: evidence and gaps from urban consumption systems - Academia.edu #Municipalism

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Behavioural nudges in circular economy transitions: evidence and gaps from urban consumption systems Urban sustainability requires innovative approaches that simultaneously address resource efficiency, waste reduction, and behavioural change. This study critically examines the role of behavioural nud...

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Calling all municipalists and anyone who want cities ran by and for the people. Support Laurence Ruffin on Sunday's poll to become Grenoble's next mayor.

#OuiGrenoble #Municipalism #CooperativeMunicipalism #LaurenceRuffin #RebelCity #Grenoble2026

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🌎 [EN] 🏘️✊ 20/03 20:00h — “Out with hate from our streets! Municipalism against the far right.” with Anna Gabriel i Sabaté.
#Municipalism

🌐 +info https://agora-r.ecoarglobal.org/anna-gabriel-i-sabate/

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We also need to decentralize state power: #ParticipatoryDemocracy #Municipalism #Communes #Cooperativism #MutualAid #CitizenAssemblies @mark-carney.bsky.social @anitaoakvilleeast.bsky.social

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Fearless cities and neighbourhoods for a living planet: from Sheffield to Rojava – Research for Action

To tackle the ecological crisis we must challenge the corporate-driven growth model and rethink power beyond the state. @steve-rushton.bsky.social explores how #Degrowth connects to #Municipalism drawing on Fearless Cites summit in Sheffield

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Fearless cities and neighbourhoods for a living planet: from Sheffield to Rojava – Research for Action

To tackle the ecological crisis we must challenge the corporate-driven growth model and rethink power beyond the state. @steve-rushton.bsky.social explores how #Degrowth connects to #Municipalism drawing on Fearless Cites summit in Sheffield

researchforaction.uk/fearless-cit...

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Building “Mass Governance” in Zohran Mamdani’s New York City Zohran Mamdani is now mayor of New York City, and the Left’s old ways of relating to elected officials won’t cut it. We need a “mass governance” approach.

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Building “Mass Governance” in Zohran Mamdani’s New York City ### Zohran Mamdani is now mayor of New York City, and the Left’s old ways of relating to elected officials won’t cut it. We need a “mass governance” approach. * * * With a socialist in New York City's mayoral office, the Left needs to think differently about how it relates to elected officials. Socialists have come to occupy a different, more central place in the political process, with new levers of power open to us. (David Dee Delgado / Getty Images) In late May, hundreds of volunteers flooded Herbert Von King Park in Brooklyn’s Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood on a sunny Saturday not just for a rally with then-mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani, but to knock on doors and talk to strangers about voting for him. We filled the park and spread out into satellite groups across the lawn, where dozens of field leads coached new and regular volunteers on how to canvass, reviewing the three core campaign promises we had all started to memorize by then. This scene played out over and over throughout New York City over the past year. In all, _over one hundred thousand_ people volunteered for the Mamdani campaign, knocking on doors, making phone calls, talking to their friends, neighbors, and to strangers. The victory that has shocked the country and the world, culminating in Zohran’s swearing in as mayor yesterday, is because of their labor, and is proof that sustained, mass organizing around clear class politics produces results. Now comes the test that matters. Will those same people and others energized by the Zohran campaign walk into power with the new administration and feel part of the political project, or watch from the sidelines? Canvassers for Zohran Mamdani in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, on May 31, 2025 (Facebook) Our default mode on the Left won’t suffice. Treating a socialist mayor like any other politician, “feet to the fire” from day one, isolates City Hall from the very forces that elected them and gives leverage to our many opponents. The tactics of pressure politics we have developed make sense in the context of most other “progressive” elected officials: the Left is a part of an electing coalition, and we need to maintain pressure over politicians to keep them to their promises amid all the compromises. But we have to think differently now: we have elected one of our own, and socialists have come to occupy a different, more central place in the political process, with new levers of power open to us. "Treating a socialist mayor like any other politician, ‘feet to the fire’ from day one, isolates City Hall from the very forces that elected them and gives leverage to our many opponents." The other default position, retreating into insider “co-governance” based on standing meetings with nonprofit directors and a handful of leaders, also won’t do, as it leaves the hundreds of thousands of people who did the work back on the sidelines. The meetings may feel important, but without a concrete way for tenants, riders, and parents to shape decisions and see their fingerprints on outcomes, the base demobilizes and the administration gets weaker. In other words, the two default scripts we know best, pure pressure from the outside and insider co-governance at the top, both shrink the field of politics just when we finally have a chance to expand it. We need to think bigger. The alternative is mass governance, putting the people at the center of the administration’s political project. It means redesigning existing institutions and creating new ones so that large numbers of working-class people become and stay engaged in the administration’s project and exercise binding power over issues of material importance. Unlike standard “co-governance” or even bland forms of “participatory democracy” that never touch real decisions, mass governance means the administration itself runs ongoing political education, helps organize neighborhoods, and opens up meaningful decision-making to neighborhood and borough assemblies to decisions on budgets, buses, and services. For socialists, the goal needs to be that we govern like we campaigned, so that every victory feels owned by the people who delivered it. That is how this administration will be successful, and how we will use this moment to bring millions of people into socialist politics and set the stage for more victories across the country. # Building Mass Governance Mass governance builds off of the work New York City Democratic Socialists of America (NYC-DSA) has done to build its Socialists in Office Committee, where endorsed socialist legislators and their staff work closely with DSA members to achieve shared goals and build the socialist movement. By organizing together in this way, we have won increased taxes on the rich in 2021, new tenant protections in 2019, and major climate victories in 2023. The Socialists in Office project works when legislators are organizing in lockstep not just with DSA leaders, but with thousands of rank-and-file members all playing a part in a campaign. From the members knocking on doors to urge their neighbors to call their state representatives to the state senators organizing their colleagues to get on a bill, we all work together to win. We must now extend the logic of that project to an executive office and the biggest movement we have had in recent years. We are fortunate to draw on lessons from the global, municipalist, democratic socialist left in Europe and Latin America that successfully pivoted from movement organizing to governance. In Porto Alegre, Brazil (1989–2004), under the Workers Party (PT), the Left managed to succeed electorally while setting the stage for dozens of further PT victories municipally and federally. The city’s fabled participatory budgeting process, which drew hundreds of thousands of participants, was a system of neighborhood- and theme-based assemblies that ranked capital projects and published delivery calendars. It delivered meaningful projects to working class communities in timely and transparent ways. It doubled as campaigning from the seat of government, with annual assembly “roadshows” that served as political education events where everyone learned the contours of the city budget and how a municipal administration works. And it mobilized volunteer corps of elected delegates/councillors who worked in communities around the city. "Mass governance means that hundreds of thousands of people feel ownership in the successes, stumbling blocks, and potential failures of the administration." Other cities went further. Montevideo, Uruguay, under the Frente Amplio (in city government since 1990), combined participatory budgeting with standing neighborhood councils (_comisiones_ or _concejos vecinales_): voluntary bodies of residents recognized by the municipality that channeled proposals from each barrio into the decentralized district centers and monitored implementation. Working-class neighborhoods could help not only set priorities for local investments, but propose ideas for existing services like bus lines and management of public spaces. In Barcelona (2015–2023), Ada Colau and Barcelona en Comú launched Decidim, a digital platform through which residents could propose, debate, and prioritize projects, while the _Pla de Barris_ program in the most excluded districts anchored face-to-face assemblies where neighbors codesigned investments in housing, schools, and public space. Those assemblies were supported by small territorial teams of community organizers and neighborhood facilitators who did outreach, organized meetings, and helped residents navigate city hall, so the new tools were backed by real on-the-ground capacity. These projects were uneven, often constrained by higher-level institutions and internal contradictions, as critics of Spanish municipalism have rightly pointed out. The lesson is less perfection than the ingredients: these administrations succeeded in advancing a socialist politics when they mobilized large numbers of working-class people and created neighborhood structures for real decision-making. A Zohran for Mayor rally on November 15, 2025 (Facebook) Mass governance means that hundreds of thousands of people feel ownership in the successes, stumbling blocks, and potential failures of the administration. That feeling of mass ownership will help us avoid othering and isolating the Mamdani administration from the base that elected him. An isolated city administration will only turn more moderate and will not be able to deliver on the affordability agenda that propelled Mamdani to victory. Instead, we want to make sure that masses of New Yorkers feel connected to the administration, feel that attacks on the administration are attacks on them, and fight back accordingly. # The Pillars of Mass Governance In practice, mass governance rests on three pillars: an administration that keeps campaigning from the seat of government, organized volunteerism, and binding public decision-making. First, we need to keep building mass movements to demand taxes on the rich and public programs that lower the cost of living for working-class New Yorkers. We will only do this through mass movement organizations that can involve tens of thousands of New Yorkers in legislative fights at the state and city levels. For the first year of the Mamdani administration, that means organizing mass campaigns to deliver on the core campaign promises: universal childcare, fast and free buses, and a rent freeze. We will need to organize people around the state and city budget cycles, make sure masses of New Yorkers know who their city council members and state legislators are, and have the tools they need to demand that those elected officials support the affordability agenda. Many organizations are gearing up for this work, with the new formation Our Time partnering with membership organizations like NYC-DSA, the New York State Tenant Bloc, and others to keep the Mamdani campaign volunteers mobilized and knocking on doors, starting with a statewide fight to tax the rich for universal childcare in the 2026 state budget. We also don’t need to limit ourselves to legislative and budget-related campaigns. Tenants who live in buildings that are part of large landlord portfolios can organize their buildings en masse as part of the New York State Tenant Bloc and demand that the city step in to help negotiate for repairs, ownership transfers to tenant cooperatives or the public sector, and more. Zohran can walk the picket line, as he did with Starbucks workers, and lend a megaphone and bully pulpit to contract fights across the city. Organizing mass campaigns of all stripes will allow us to involve thousands of working-class New Yorkers in the project of making the city more affordable; they will feel ownership over those victories, and a connection with the mayor who worked with them to win. Zohran Mamdani and Bernie Sanders join striking Starbucks workers in New York on December 1, 2025. (Angela Weiss / AFP via Getty Images) Second, we need to support mass volunteerism. Many people already volunteer with the city in hundreds of different ways. We know elderly tenants who volunteer at their local public libraries to teach literacy, friends who volunteer with the Parks Department to plant trees and wildflowers across the city, and many more. Outside of city government, we know of mutual aid networks throughout the city that were crucial for everyday survival during the pandemic. And we know of ICE defense networks to protect neighbors from illegal seizure and deportation. We can expand these volunteer opportunities and give volunteers some level of decisionmaking power through the work they do, to give them more ownership over the city. This level of mass volunteering can make more people feel a connection to their city, and could mitigate people’s tendency to blame the government or the mayor for anything and everything that goes wrong. The city already supports volunteering efforts, but this could be vastly increased and organized. Using his vast social media following, the mayor could send out calls to volunteer for particular projects like a specific park cleanup or restoration project, to give direction to a thousands-strong corps of volunteers and make people feel like this city is ours to fix and build. These volunteer opportunities could be followed up with political education on the size of the parks budget and lead volunteers to develop connections between the parts of the city they love and the political considerations that shape New York. The city could hire and deploy organizers around the city to expand and sustain this mass volunteer approach, building off of the feeling of connection that so many people felt during the campaign and giving people a sense of belonging and ownership over the city. A Zohran for Mayor rally at Terminal 5 in New York City on June 14, 2025 (Facebook) And third, and perhaps most challenging, we need to make participation within city government structures meaningful. New York already has significant participatory infrastructure, but much of it is shallow, fragmented, and symbolic. People are tired and skeptical of endless “listening sessions.” Processes today are uncoordinated, repetitive, and disconnected from outcomes. Many New Yorkers who have taken time off work or childcare to show up for government-led engagement feel their time was wasted. A Mamdani administration can do things differently by adopting a coherent activist posture toward engagement that emphasizes clarity, outcomes, and respect for people’s time. Every participatory initiative should be coordinated within a citywide architecture, not left siloed. Engagement should be seen as “campaigning from government”: ongoing mobilization tied to real decisions, not passive consultation. Making participation meaningful starts with very basic, very concrete things: childcare, food, language interpretation, disability access, and even some “festival” elements: music, flu or COVID shots, legal or immigration clinics. Every process should also build shared analysis: simple maps and infographics, basic numbers about who gets what, examples from other cities, and one or two people in the room who can answer technical questions. "A Mamdani administration can do things differently by adopting a coherent, activist posture toward engagement that emphasizes clarity, outcomes, and respect for people’s time." A socialist administration doesn’t have to invent everything from scratch. New York already has community boards, school councils, participatory budgeting, and all manner of advisory commissions, though too often they are treated as symbolic. A mass governance approach would start by auditing these bodies, strengthening and upgrading the ones that people already use, consolidate or retire the ones that don’t work, and organize the rest into a coherent system that maximizes participants’ ability to make binding decisions that materially deliver for them. Every process should produce a public list of priorities, a written response from the city, and a visible timeline, so people can see whether their participation actually moves resources. In New York, assemblies should be organized at two main scales. Neighborhood assemblies would meet monthly in schools, libraries, or New York City Housing Authority community centers, always tied to concrete issues like housing, transit, or community safety in a defined area, with relevant city staff in the room. Borough-level assemblies would meet quarterly to debate and rank broader priorities, especially around budgets and major projects. Their calendars should be synchronized with existing decision cycles, like the state and city budgets, so they become a front door to real institutional power while the rest of the participatory infrastructure is being brought into line with our political project. Within that framework, community boards would be crucial. New York’s fifty-nine boards already cover every neighborhood; with clearer mandates and defined decision rights, they can function as real civic governance bodies. People activated by the Mamdani campaign should be encouraged to attend and apply for community board seats, and the administration should inject greater responsibility into the board structure so these spaces feel like vibrant forums where residents can exert control over their city. We can use this same community board structure to host neighborhood forums on issues, and outside groups should prioritize turnout to these meetings. "The task isn’t to _manage_ a socialist mayor or to offer a shield; it’s to govern with a majority that can win fights, absorb setbacks, and grow more powerful." To deliver fast and free buses, the administration or supportive organizations could organize mass town halls where residents map out their ideal bus routes, then get organized to pressure their council members and community board to approve new bus lanes. On housing, we can imagine tenants organizing in their buildings toward cooperative ownership, partnering with the city government on enforcement, and then joining mass movements for budget justice to win the financing for social housing and rental assistance. The city could host town halls to source what produce should go in the city-owned grocery stores, and attendees could then participate in budget hearings to demand that the city council approve the funding necessary to get that pilot program up and running. We can use internal participatory avenues to bring people into the functioning of government, and external mass movement infrastructure to organize people into the fight to win our big picture demands. # Beyond an Inside/Outside Strategy Pursuing a mass governance strategy would allow us to discard the tired “inside/outside” orientation of movements to elected officials. The task isn’t to _manage_ a socialist mayor or to offer a shield; it’s to govern with a majority that can win fights, absorb setbacks, and grow more powerful. That requires visible delivery on basic and material gains people can feel, and it requires that those gains be the outcome of processes people can see themselves in. We can create a new orientation for movements toward governance, one that can be replicated across the country. City officials and movement organizers can work together to bring people into the project of delivering a more affordable New York. The core of mass governance must be bringing thousands, even millions of people into the shared project of delivering the affordability agenda alongside the mayor. That is how we will be successful not just in delivering material improvements to the working class, but in developing a true majority for socialist politics. We need as many New Yorkers as possible to feel like they are a part of the project to lower the cost of living in the city. That is how we deliver the affordability agenda and weather serious attacks from hostile federal, state, and city politicians, as well as a panicking capitalist class who will use every lever imaginable to stop the success of this administration. This is our chance to make socialist governance successful in the largest city in the United States. We only get one chance to get it right. If we do, it will lead to municipal socialism across the country and feed into a national fight to take power in this country for the working class. * * *

Building “Mass Governance” in Zohran Mamdani’s New York City #municipalism

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Radical Municipalism Debbie Bookchin Radical Municipalism The Future We Deserve Summer 2017

Meh what about radical #municipalism theanarchistlibrary.org/library/debb... #bookchin #anarchism

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Zohran Mamdani Needs to Create Popular Assemblies ### If Zohran Mamdani is serious about delivering on his promises, he needs more than policies — he needs institutions that empower working people. Popular assemblies offer a way to build a new, bottom-up political culture in New York City. * * * Zohran Mamdani should look seriously at making popular assemblies a key part of his governing strategy. (Neil Constantine / NurPhoto via Getty Images) Zohran Mamdani’s electoral triumph represented more than just an off-year upset. It confirmed that democratic socialist politics, when pursued with discipline, vision, and vigor, can resonate broadly even in a city known for entrenched power structures and the quiet vetoes of wealth. The campaign succeeded not because New Yorkers suddenly became ideologues, but because Zohran came across as credible, authentic, and serious about improving people’s lives. Voters responded to an affordability agenda rooted in everyday pressures, housing costs, transit, childcare, groceries, and to a candidate they trusted to fight for them. But underlying the campaign was a message of change. Not just policy change, but a change in how politics is conducted and how workers relate to power in the city. That second mandate matters just as much as the first. Delivering affordability without changing the relationship between citizens and governance risks reproducing a familiar pattern: a progressive administration hemmed in by hostile elites, procedural roadblocks, and a social base that mobilizes every few years only to demobilize once governing begins. That’s why Mamdani should look seriously at making popular assemblies a key part of his governing strategy. Because without reshaping the relationship between the governed and the government, his administration will not only fall short of its particularly socialist promise but struggle to deliver on its broader progressive one too. # Popular Assemblies as a Governing Tool Affordability should remain the keyword for every socialist in New York City. Cost-of-living concerns won Zohran power, and his administration will be judged on its ability to deliver results on that basis. But socialism cannot be reduced to a checklist of redistributive policies, however necessary they are. At its core, democratic socialism is a project to build working-class power through popular struggle, both to win immediate reforms and to lay the basis for a society beyond capitalism. It aims not only to improve living standards through redistribution and public provision, but to increase the capacity of workers to collectively shape the decisions that shape their lives. These two goals are inseparable. Material gains make political participation possible, while political power is what allows those gains to be won, defended, and extended. There is also a case for popular assemblies that is less lofty but just as compelling: they can help a Mamdani administration govern. Zohran Mamdani will enter office facing a dense web of institutional and economic resistance. In New York, power does not reside only in City Hall. It is exercised through landlords who can derail progressive housing policy, through business interests that shape investment and threaten capital flight, through a political establishment adept at procedural obstruction, and through a state structure that limits mayoral authority. To break through predictable roadblocks, Mamdani will need an organized base capable of applying pressure beyond election cycles, contesting elite vetoes, and shifting the balance of power around concrete policy fights. Popular assemblies offer one way to help build that capacity, not as symbolic gestures, but as institutions that link governing priorities to collective action in the city itself. "Mamdani will need an organized base capable of applying pressure beyond election cycles, contesting elite vetoes, and shifting the balance of power around concrete policy fights." In practice, this means creating regular, institutionalized spaces where ordinary people participate in decisions that affect their neighborhoods and daily lives. Done well, assemblies can strengthen associational life, build durable networks of participation, and help turn episodic electoral support into sustained political power. Assemblies and associated reforms linked to a broader mass governance project can deliver material benefits to working-class communities. Research on participatory institutions in Latin American cities shows that these institutions can only succeed in attracting mass participation to the extent that they deliver real benefits that matter to people’s lives. By giving workers and the poor a chance to deliberate and provide meaningful input into decisions that affect their lives, popular assemblies can also foster working-class political empowerment, something key to any vision of democratic socialism. They can also help generate consent for progressive policies. Research consistently shows that people are more likely to accept decisions, even ones they disagree with, when they believe the process was fair, inclusive, and meaningful. Participation matters not only for outcomes, but for legitimacy. The success of the recent event “The Mayor Is Listening,” in which Zohran met for twelve hours with ordinary New Yorkers at the Museum of the Moving Image, helps show this. The event, which generated glowing news stories, was designed to show that Zohran will not govern behind New Yorkers’ backs but in dialogue with them. While successful, this exercise was of course limited; Zohran listened but promised nothing more. Popular assemblies can tap into the energy and excitement this event generated and link it to a broader process of mass governance. There is also growing evidence that well-designed participatory institutions can reduce polarization and foster unity even with respect to politically charged and contentious issues such as climate change. Shared experiences of deliberation can cut across ideological and social divides, countering the gridlock that increasingly defines both state institutions and civil society. And because people tend to trust information from peers more than politicians, assemblies can also function as credible channels for communication, not just decision-making. One way this has happened is through citizen assemblies empowered to request information from experts, which the assemblies can discuss and disseminate, in some fashion, to broader publics. In short, popular assemblies are not a distraction from governing. They are a way of governing that strengthens the administration’s hand rather than weakening it. # How Assemblies Could Work There is no single model of popular assemblies. They have taken many forms across different contexts: participatory budgeting, health councils, and water boards in Latin America; neighborhood councils and citizen panels in Europe and North America; climate assemblies in France and elsewhere. Outcomes have varied widely. Participatory budgeting is often cited as a success story, and in places like Porto Alegre, Brazil, it genuinely was. There, it reshaped spending priorities, expanded access to services, fostered a culture of participation and accountability, and gave working-class communities an effective way to obtain meaningful material resources such as paving, streetlights, and bus lines. In the United States, by contrast, participatory budgeting has typically been implemented on a far smaller scale, controlling only a sliver of municipal budgets and producing much more limited results. The lesson is not that assemblies do not work, but that design matters. Institutions can empower, or they can frustrate. Rather than insisting on a single form, it makes more sense to identify a set of principles through which popular assemblies can enhance working-class political agency and build organizational and mobilizational capacity. First, assemblies must offer ordinary people real and meaningful opportunities to affect the decisions that shape their lives. Participation without influence is a recipe for cynicism. If assemblies are perceived as merely symbolic, spaces for discussion with no tangible impact on policy or strategy, they will quickly lose credibility. Second, assemblies must be designed to foster meaningful deliberation. This involves more than airing grievances or tallying preferences. It means creating structured spaces where participants weigh trade-offs, hear competing arguments, and offer reasons for preferring one course of action over another. Creating deliberative spaces is crucial not just for instrumental reasons but because deliberation is how non-elites “learn to govern themselves.” Debate and deliberation are also a key means by which working-class communities can forge unity across the many divides — of race, gender, language, national origin, ability, and more — that keep them separated. "Assemblies must offer ordinary people real and meaningful opportunities to affect the decisions that shape their lives. Participation without influence is a recipe for cynicism." However, absent deliberate design, participatory institutions tend to reproduce existing divisions and inequalities of time, confidence, and political experience. They could, in other words, become a talk shop for existing activists. That risk does not argue against assemblies, but for careful structuring. Deliberation requires facilitation, clear agendas, and defined decision-making pathways. It also requires attention to accessibility: meeting times and locations that accommodate working schedules, childcare, and formats that welcome people unfamiliar with formal political settings. This is where political leadership becomes decisive. If popular assemblies are to reach beyond the already politicized and become vehicles for broader working-class participation, Zohran and his administration will need to actively initiate and guide the process. That means setting clear priorities, signaling that participation will shape real decisions, and visibly integrating assembly feedback into the administration’s governing agenda. Without that kind of leadership, participatory spaces tend to default to those already comfortable navigating politics. In New York, assemblies should be organized at two main scales. Neighborhood assemblies could meet once a month in schools, libraries, or New York City Housing Authority community centers. These assemblies would be tied to concrete issues like housing, transit, and community safety in a defined area and count with relevant city staff. Borough-level assemblies could meet quarterly to debate and rank broader priorities, especially around budgets and major projects. Each yearly assembly cycle would end in a clear decision point (such as priorities) that feed into published timelines and budget proposals. To work, the assemblies need guaranteed translation, childcare, stipends for facilitators, and a permanent staff. Assembly calendars should be synchronized with existing decision cycles, like the state and city budgets, so they become a sort of front door to real institutional power until participatory structures in the city are aligned with the broader proposal outlined here. Assemblies should be linked to a broader mass governance project that includes projects initiated from City Hall, budget and data campaigns, support for mass volunteerism (e.g., a city-backed volunteer corps), and retooling existing state structures, institutions, and processes under a coherent and empowered framework. There are, inevitably, trade-offs — between neighborhood-based and issue-based assemblies, between advisory and binding authority, between in-person and hybrid formats. These choices should be guided by the broader goal of enhancing working-class agency and building a social base capable of sustaining reform. # Democracy Inside and Outside the State These questions are not new. Writing in the 1970s, the Marxist theorist Nicos Poulantzas warned that both social democracy and Soviet-style state socialism shared a distrust of mass initiative. One wanted to manage capitalism from above in the interest of workers, the other suppressed pluralism in the name of the popular will. The alternative he outlined was a strategy of dual democratization: transforming representative institutions while simultaneously expanding direct forms of democracy outside the state. "Mamdani can treat popular enthusiasm as a temporary resource to be spent or invest in it as the foundation of a new kind of politics." This was not a rejection of elections or representative government, but a way of deepening them. Representative democracy, in this view, is strengthened, not undermined, by an organized citizenry capable of exerting pressure, generating ideas, and holding leaders accountable. Such a movement becomes a bulwark against both technocratic stagnation and authoritarian reaction. That vision remains compelling. Governing from City Hall without an empowered movement risks sliding into a technocratic form of social democracy that delivers incremental gains while leaving underlying power relations intact. We, after all, were lucky to elect someone who isn’t the second coming of Bill de Blasio but a socialist already familiar with radical democratic ideas, but who is also keenly aware of the limits of the politicization he has thus far unleashed — and the urgent need to transform that energy into lasting institutional change. # Starting From Where We Are Zohran Mamdani’s electoral strength far exceeds the organized strength of the working class in the city. Most people are busy, skeptical, and unused to sustained political participation. That is precisely why popular assemblies matter. They can serve as bridges between electoral support and durable organization. Neighborhood and borough assemblies, tied to concrete issues of affordability, can connect people to the agenda that brought Zohran to office, give them a role in shaping it, and allow them to see themselves as political actors rather than merely voters. In that sense, assemblies are not simply a way of channeling an already existing movement. They are a way of helping to build one. They offer a means of translating electoral enthusiasm into lasting democratic capacity, of creating, from above, the conditions for bottom-up participation that does not yet exist at scale. Zohran Mamdani has been given a rare opportunity. He can treat popular enthusiasm as a temporary resource to be spent or invest in it as the foundation of a new kind of politics. Assemblies are not a panacea. But without institutions that expand political agency alongside material reform, the promise of this moment will be harder to fulfill and easier to undo. If democratic socialism is to mean more than progressive administration, it must find institutional expression. In New York, that should begin by giving ordinary people a real seat at the table, and the power to shape what comes next. * * *

Zohran Needs to Create Popular Assemblies #municipalism

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Zohran Needs to Create Popular Assemblies If Zohran Mamdani is serious about delivering on his promises, he needs more than policies — he needs institutions that empower working people. Popular assemblies offer a way to build a new, bottom-up...

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Co-Cities: Innovative Transitions toward Just and Self-Sustaining Communities A new model of urban governance, mapping the route to a more equitable management of a citys infrastructure and services. The majority of the world's inhabitants live in cities. Yet, even with the...

Co-Cities: Innovative Transitions toward Just and Self-Sustaining Communities #municipalism

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Co-Cities: Innovative Transitions toward Just and Self-Sustaining Communities A new model of urban governance, mapping the route to a more equitable management of a citys infrastructure and services. The majority of the world's inhabitants live in cities. Yet, even with the vast wealth and resources these cities generate,

Co-Cities: Innovative Transitions toward Just and Self-Sustaining Communities #municipalism

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https://jaco bin.com/2025/12/spain-mamdani-colau-carmena-municipal/

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Spain’s Left Municipal Governance Lessons for Zohran Mamdani Balancing the smooth running of local government with a bold reform agenda, as Zohran Mamdani will have to do in New York, isn’t easy. Spain’s recent experiments with left local governance offer some ...

#municipalism

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Mexico City’s UTOPIAs – Socialist Forum

#municipalism

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Mexico City’s UTOPIAs – Socialist Forum

socialistforum.dsausa.org/issues/fall-winter-2025/...

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What I am reading this week

www.laborpolitics.com/p/sewer-socialism-in-wis...

#reading #municipalism #municipal

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#municipalism

convergencemag.com/articles/assemblies-palm...

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Assemblies: A Path to Co-Governance and Democratic Renewal A hybrid model of assemblies may be the key to bringing in vast numbers of people into the process of forging a new world and governing the one we have.

#municipalism

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Pluralistic: Zohran Mamdani's world-class photocopier-kicker (15 Nov 2025) Today's links Zohran Mamdani's world-class photocopier-kicker: Lina Khan has plans for New York City. Hey look at this: Delights to delectate. Object permanence: Pirate code in Sony rootkit; Tim Wu on "New Monopolists"; Supersonic chirps in ads; Fordite; Sony's rootkit uninstaller leaves computers insecure; Anne Frank Foundation's copyfraud. Upcoming appearances: Where to find me. Recent appearances: Where I've been. Latest books: You keep readin' em, I'll keep writin' 'em. Upcoming books: Like I said, I'll keep writin' 'em. Colophon: All the rest. Zohran Mamdani's world-class photocopier-kicker (permalink) The most exciting thing about Biden's antitrust enforcers was how good they were at their jobs. They were dead-on chapter-and-verse on every authority and statute available to the administrative branch, and they set about in earnest figuring out how to use those powers to help the American people: https://www.eff.org/de/deeplinks/2021/08/party-its-1979-og-antitrust-back-baby It was a remarkable contrast from the default Democratic Party line, which is to insist that being elected gives you no power at all, because of filibusters or Republicans or pollsters or decorum or billionaire donors or Mercury in retrograde. It's also a remarkable contrast from Republicans, whose approach to politics is "fuck you, we said so, and our billionaires have showered the Supreme Court in enough money to make that stick." But under Biden, the trustbusters that had been chosen and fought for by the Warren-Sanders wing of the party proved themselves to be both a) incredibly principled; and b) incredibly skilled. They memorized the rulebook(s) and then figured out what they needed to do to mobilize those rules to makes Americans' lives better by shielding them from swindlers, predators and billionaires (often the same person, obvs). They epitomized the joke about the photocopier repair tech, who comes into the office, delivers a swift kick to the xerox machine, and hands you a bill for $75. "$75 for kicking the photocopier?" "No, it's $5 to kick the photocopier, and $70 for knowing where to kick it." https://pluralistic.net/2022/10/18/administrative-competence/#i-know-stuff One of Biden's best photocopier kickers was and is Lina Khan. She embodies the incredible potential of a fully operational battle-station, which is to say that she embodies the awesome power of a skilled technocrat who is also deeply ethical and genuinely interested in helping the public. Technocrats get a bad name, because they tend to be empty suits like Pete Buttigieg, who either didn't know what powers he had, or lacked the courage (or desire) to wield them: https://pluralistic.net/2023/01/10/the-courage-to-govern/#whos-in-charge But another way of saying "technocrat" is "someone who is very good at their job." And that's Khan. You'll never guess what Khan is doing now: she's co-chairing Zohran Mamdani's transition team! https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/nov/12/yes-new-york-will-soon-be-under-new-management-but-zohran-mamdani-is-just-the-start Khan's role in the Mamdani administration will be familiar to those of us who cheered her on at the Federal Trade Commission: she is metabolizing the rules that define the actions that mayors are allowed to take, figuring out how to use those actions to improve the lives of working New Yorkers, and making a plan to combine the former with the latter to make a real difference: https://www.semafor.com/article/11/12/2025/lina-khans-populist-plan-for-new-york-cheaper-hot-dogs-and-other-things Front and center is the New York City Consumer Protection Law of 1969, which contains a broad prohibition on "unconscionable" commercial practices: https://repository.law.umich.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2404&context=mjlr There are many statute books that contain a law like this. For example, Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act bans "unfair and deceptive" practices, and this rule is so useful that it was transposed, almost verbatim, into the statute that defines the Department of Transportation's powers: https://pluralistic.net/2023/01/16/for-petes-sake/#unfair-and-deceptive Now, this isn't carte blanche for enforcers to simply point at anything they don't like and declare it to be "unconscionable" or "unfair" or "deceptive" and shut it down. To use these powers, enforcers must first "develop a record" by getting feedback from the public about the problem. The normal way to do this is through "notice and comment," where you collect comments from anyone who wants to weigh in on the issue. Practically speaking, though, "anyone" turns out to be "lawyers and lobbyists working for industry," who are the only people who pay attention to this kind of thing and know how to navigate it. When Khan was running the FTC, she launched plenty of notice and comment efforts, but she went much further, doing "listening tours" in which she and her officials and staff went to the people, traveling the country convening well-attended public meetings where everyday people got to weigh in on these issues. This is an incredibly powerful approach, because enforcers can only act to address the issues in the record, and if you only hear from lawyers and lobbyists, you can only act to address their concerns. Remember when Mamdani was on the campaign trail and he went out and talked to street vendors about why halal cart food had gotten so expensive? It turns out that halal cart vendors each have to pay tens of thousands of dollars to economic parasites who've cornered the market on food cart licenses, which they rent out at exorbitant markups to vendors, who pass those costs on to New Yorkers every lunchtime: https://documentedny.com/2025/11/04/halal-food-trucks-back-mamdani/ That's the kind of thing Khan did when she was running the FTC, identifying serious problems, then seeking out the everyday people best suited to describing how the underlying scams hurt, and how they harmed everyday people: https://pluralistic.net/2024/07/24/gouging-the-all-seeing-eye/#i-spy Khan's already picked out some "unconscionable" practices that the mayor has "standalone authority" to address: everything from hospitals that price gouge on over-the-counter pain meds to sports stadiums that gouge fans on hot dogs and beer. She's taking aim at "algorithmic pricing" (when companies use commercial surveillance data to determine whether you're desperate and raise prices to take advantage of that fact) and junk fees (where the price you pay goes way up at checkout time to pay for a bunch of vague "services" that you can't opt out of). This is already making all the right people lose their minds, with screaming headlines about how this will "deliver a socialist agenda": https://web.archive.org/web/20251114230206/https://nypost.com/2025/11/14/us-news/zohran-mamdanis-transition-leader-lina-khan-seeks-more-power-for-him/ In a long-form interview with Jon Stewart, Khan goes deep on her regulatory philosophy and the way she's going to bring the same fire she brought to the most effective FTC since the Carter administration to Mamdani's historic administration of New York City, a municipality with a population and economy that's larger than many US states and foreign nations: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vRJWM_3OW2Y One important aspect of Khan's work that she is always at pains to stress is deterrence. When an enforcer acts against a company that is scamming and preying upon the public, their private finances and internal communications become a matter of public record. Employees and executives have to be painstakingly instructed and monitored so that they don't say anything that will prejudice their cases. All this happens irrespective of the eventual outcome of the case. Remember: we're at the tail end of a 40-year experiment in official tolerance and encouragement for monopolies and corporate predation. Those lost generations saw the construction of a massive edifice of bad case-law and judicial intuition. Smashing that wall won't happen overnight. There will be a lot of losses. But when the process is (part of) the punishment, the mere existence of someone like Khan in a position of power can terrify companies into being on their best behavior. As MLK put it, "The law can't make a man love me, but it can stop him from lynching me, and that's pretty important." The oligarchs that acquired their wealth and power by ripping off New Yorkers will never truly believe that working people deserve a fair shake – but if they're sufficiently afraid of the likes of Khan, they'll damned well act like they do. (Image: lee, CC BY-SA 4.0, modified) Hey look at this (permalink) A dream denied: My 54-year quest to publish a short story in F&SF https://www.scottedelman.com/wordpress/2025/11/12/a-dream-denied/ The algorithm failed music https://www.theverge.com/column/815744/music-recommendation-algorithms Why the filibuster? https://coreyrobin.com/2025/11/11/why-the-filibuster/ Britain’s Railway Privatization Was an Abject Failure https://www.rosalux.de/en/news/id/53917/britains-railway-privatization-was-an-abject-failure The lawsuit is over! https://linkletter.org/update-33-the-lawsuit-is-over/ Object permanence (permalink) #20yrsago Sony begins to recall some infected CDs https://web.archive.org/web/20051127235441/http://www.usatoday.com/money/industries/technology/2005-11-14-sony-cds_x.htm #20yrsago Sony’s rootkit uninstaller is really dangerous https://blog.citp.princeton.edu/2005/11/14/dont-use-sonys-web-based-xcp-uninstaller/ #20yrsago Table made from ancient, giant hard-drive platter https://web.archive.org/web/20050929185244/https://grandideastudio.com/portfolio/index.php?id=1&prod=20 #20yrsago EFF to Sony: you broke it, you oughta fix it https://web.archive.org/web/20051126084944/http://www.eff.org/IP/DRM/Sony-BMG/?f=open-letter-2005-11-14.html #20yrsago Sony anti-customer technology roundup and time-line https://memex.craphound.com/2005/11/14/sony-anti-customer-technology-roundup-and-time-line/ #20yrsago Visa’s “free” laptop costs at least $60 more than retail in fees https://web.archive.org/web/20051125053825/http://debt-consolidation.strategy-blogs.com/2005/10/free-laptop-from-visa.html #20yrsago Sony’s rootkit infringes on software copyrights https://web.archive.org/web/20061108150242/https://dewinter.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=215 #20yrsago Gizmodo flamed by crazy inventor; turns out he’s a crook https://web.archive.org/web/20051126101341/https://us.gizmodo.com/gadgets/portable-media/iload-inventor-vents-is-out-on-bail-136934.php #20yrsago Fox counsels viewers to share videos of shows https://memex.craphound.com/2005/11/13/fox-counsels-viewers-to-share-videos-of-shows/ #20yrsago Sony’s malware uninstaller leaves your computer vulnerable https://www.hack.fi/~muzzy/sony-drm/ #15yrsago Tim Wu on the new monopolists: a “last chapter” for The Master Switch https://web.archive.org/web/20151214010555/https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052748704635704575604993311538482 #15yrsago Man at San Diego airport opts out of porno scanner and grope, told he’ll be fined $10K unless he submits to fondling https://johnnyedge.blogspot.com/2010/11/these-events-took-place-roughly-between.html #10yrsago 100 useful tips from a bygone era https://digitalcollections.nypl.org/search/index?q=gallaher++how+to+do+it#/?scroll=18 #10yrsago Copyfraud: Anne Frank Foundation claims father was “co-author,” extends copyright by decades https://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/14/books/anne-frank-has-a-co-as-diary-gains-co-author-in-legal-move.html #10yrsago Startup uses ultrasound chirps to covertly link and track all your devices https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2015/11/beware-of-ads-that-use-inaudible-sound-to-link-your-phone-tv-tablet-and-pc/ #10yrsago Cop who unplugged his cam before killing a 19-year-old girl is rehired https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2015/11/cop-fired-for-having-lapel-cam-turned-off-a-lot-reinstated-to-force/ #10yrsago Hospitals are patient zero for the Internet of Things infosec epidemic https://web.archive.org/web/20151113050443/https://www.bloomberg.com/features/2015-hospital-hack/ #10yrsago Ol’ Dirty Bastard’s FBI files https://www.muckrock.com/news/archives/2015/nov/13/ol-dirty-bastard-fbi-files/ #10yrsago I-Spy Surveillance Books: a child’s first Snoopers Charter https://scarfolk.blogspot.com/2015/11/i-spy-surveillance-books.html #10yrsago China routinely tortures human rights lawyers https://www.businessinsider.com/amnesty-international-report-on-torture-2015-11 #10yrsago Fordite: a rare mineral only found in old Detroit auto-painting facilities https://miningeology.blogspot.com/2015/07/the-most-amazing-rocks.html #10yrsago Facebook won’t remove photo of children tricked into posing for neo-fascist group https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-nottinghamshire-34797757 #5yrsago Big Car wants to pump the brakes on Right to Repair https://pluralistic.net/2020/11/13/said-no-one-ever/#r2r #1yrago America's richest Medicare fraudsters are untouchable https://pluralistic.net/2024/11/13/last-gasp/#i-cant-breathe Upcoming appearances (permalink) London: Enshittification with Sarah Wynn-Williams and Chris Morris, Nov 15 https://www.barbican.org.uk/whats-on/2025/event/cory-doctorow-with-sarah-wynn-williams London: Downstream IRL with Zack Polanski, Ash Sarkar, and Aaron Bastani (Novara Media), Nov 17 https://dice.fm/partner/tickets/event/oen5rr-downstream-irl-aaron-bastani-in-conversation-with-cory-doctorow-17th-nov-earth-london-tickets London: Enshittification with Carole Cadwalladr (Frontline Club), Nov 18 https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/in-conversation-enshittification-tickets-1785553983029 Virtual: Enshittification at the Internet Archive, Nov 21 https://www.eventbrite.com/e/book-talk-enshittification-tickets-1839608451399 Virtual: Enshittification with Vass Bednar (Vancouver Public Library), Nov 21 https://www.crowdcast.io/@bclibraries-present Toronto: Jailbreaking Canada (OCAD U), Nov 27 https://www.ocadu.ca/events-and-exhibitions/jailbreaking-canada San Diego: Enshittification at the Mission Hills Branch Library, Dec 1 https://libraryfoundationsd.org/events/doctorow Seattle: Neuroscience, AI and Society (University of Washington), Dec 4 https://www.eventbrite.com/e/neuroscience-ai-and-society-cory-doctorow-tickets-1735371255139 Madison, CT: Enshittification at RJ Julia, Dec 8 https://rjjulia.com/event/2025-12-08/cory-doctorow-enshittification Hamburg: Chaos Communications Congress, Dec 27-30 https://events.ccc.de/congress/2025/infos/index.html Recent appearances (permalink) How to dis-Enshittify the world (Blood In the Machine) https://www.bloodinthemachine.com/p/how-to-dis-enshittify-the-world-with Reimagining Digital Public Infrastructure (Attention: Govern Or Be Governed) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F8JuXDfDtBY Enshittification and How To Fight It (ILSR) https://www.whoshallrule.com/p/enshittification-and-how-to-fight Big Tech’s “Enshittification” & Bill McKibben on Solar Hope for the Planet https://www.writersvoice.net/2025/11/cory-doctorow-on-big-techs-enshittification-bill-mckibben-on-solar-hope-for-the-planet/ Enshittification and the Rot Economy with Ed Zitron (Clarion West) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tz71pIWbFyc Latest books (permalink) "Canny Valley": A limited edition collection of the collages I create for Pluralistic, self-published, September 2025 "Enshittification: Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to Do About It," Farrar, Straus, Giroux, October 7 2025 https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780374619329/enshittification/ "Picks and Shovels": a sequel to "Red Team Blues," about the heroic era of the PC, Tor Books (US), Head of Zeus (UK), February 2025 (https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250865908/picksandshovels). "The Bezzle": a sequel to "Red Team Blues," about prison-tech and other grifts, Tor Books (US), Head of Zeus (UK), February 2024 (the-bezzle.org). "The Lost Cause:" a solarpunk novel of hope in the climate emergency, Tor Books (US), Head of Zeus (UK), November 2023 (http://lost-cause.org). "The Internet Con": A nonfiction book about interoperability and Big Tech (Verso) September 2023 (http://seizethemeansofcomputation.org). Signed copies at Book Soup (https://www.booksoup.com/book/9781804291245). "Red Team Blues": "A grabby, compulsive thriller that will leave you knowing more about how the world works than you did before." Tor Books http://redteamblues.com. "Chokepoint Capitalism: How to Beat Big Tech, Tame Big Content, and Get Artists Paid, with Rebecca Giblin", on how to unrig the markets for creative labor, Beacon Press/Scribe 2022 https://chokepointcapitalism.com Upcoming books (permalink) "Unauthorized Bread": a middle-grades graphic novel adapted from my novella about refugees, toasters and DRM, FirstSecond, 2026 "Enshittification, Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to Do About It" (the graphic novel), Firstsecond, 2026 "The Memex Method," Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 2026 "The Reverse-Centaur's Guide to AI," a short book about being a better AI critic, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2026 Colophon (permalink) Today's top sources: Currently writing: "The Reverse Centaur's Guide to AI," a short book for Farrar, Straus and Giroux about being an effective AI critic. FIRST DRAFT COMPLETE AND SUBMITTED. A Little Brother short story about DIY insulin PLANNING This work – excluding any serialized fiction – is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. That means you can use it any way you like, including commercially, provided that you attribute it to me, Cory Doctorow, and include a link to pluralistic.net. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Quotations and images are not included in this license; they are included either under a limitation or exception to copyright, or on the basis of a separate license. Please exercise caution. How to get Pluralistic: Blog (no ads, tracking, or data-collection): Pluralistic.net Newsletter (no ads, tracking, or data-collection): https://pluralistic.net/plura-list Mastodon (no ads, tracking, or data-collection): https://mamot.fr/@pluralistic Medium (no ads, paywalled): https://doctorow.medium.com/ Twitter (mass-scale, unrestricted, third-party surveillance and advertising): https://twitter.com/doctorow Tumblr (mass-scale, unrestricted, third-party surveillance and advertising): https://mostlysignssomeportents.tumblr.com/tagged/pluralistic "When life gives you SARS, you make sarsaparilla" -Joey "Accordion Guy" DeVilla READ CAREFULLY: By reading this, you agree, on behalf of your employer, to release me from all obligations and waivers arising from any and all NON-NEGOTIATED agreements, licenses, terms-of-service, shrinkwrap, clickwrap, browsewrap, confidentiality, non-disclosure, non-compete and acceptable use policies ("BOGUS AGREEMENTS") that I have entered into with your employer, its partners, licensors, agents and assigns, in perpetuity, without prejudice to my ongoing rights and privileges. You further represent that you have the authority to release me from any BOGUS AGREEMENTS on behalf of your employer. ISSN: 3066-764X
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Instant Libertarian Municipalist Affordances And Longevity
Product Code: 087f221d
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20 $

Instant Libertarian Municipalist Affordances And Longevity offers an immersive experience by reorganizing one's spatial awareness into egalitarian geometric patterns. As users interact with their surroundings, municipal infrastructure adapts to maximize efficiency within communal spaces. Personal autonomy increases through optimized social interactions facilitated by ILMAL's proprietary Altruism Algorithm.

Upon activation, citizens report enhanced community engagement and heightened feelings of civic responsibility due to subtle environmental cues, recalibrating societal priorities toward decentralized collectivism.

No ratings yet Instant Libertarian Municipalist Affordances And Longevity Product Code: 087f221d In Stock 20 $ Instant Libertarian Municipalist Affordances And Longevity offers an immersive experience by reorganizing one's spatial awareness into egalitarian geometric patterns. As users interact with their surroundings, municipal infrastructure adapts to maximize efficiency within communal spaces. Personal autonomy increases through optimized social interactions facilitated by ILMAL's proprietary Altruism Algorithm. Upon activation, citizens report enhanced community engagement and heightened feelings of civic responsibility due to subtle environmental cues, recalibrating societal priorities toward decentralized collectivism.

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Instant Libertarian Municipalist Affordances And Longevity

#MurrayBookchin #libertarianmunicipalism #libertariansocialism #socialecology #municipalism #communalism #socialism #wellbeing #community #relational #humanism #supportnetworks

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Restoring our capacities: How an asset lens can serve movements today This article was originally published by NPQ Online on July 23, 2025,

#Municipalism ino.to/drU2LuJ

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Mamdani holds double-digit lead over Cuomo in DDHQ average New York City Democratic mayoral nominee Zohran Mamdani leads former Gov. Andrew Cuomo by 13 points in Decision Desk HQ’s (DDHQ) recently formed average tracking the race.  The average, made up of …

And when #Mamdani wins, we need to implement Murray Bookchin's radical #municipalism
thehill.com/homenews/cam...
More here
theanarchistlibrary.org/library/debb... #bookchin #anarchism #anarchist #vermont #brooklyn #newyork #Climate

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The New Municipal The New Municipal Movements Movements Much more than simply a strategy for local governance, radical municipalism is Much more than simply a strategy for local governance, radical municipalism is emerging as a path to social freedom and d...

Two articles on #municipalism by @eleanorfinley.bsky.social ...
1) The New Municipal Movements Movements -- Roar Magazine www.academia.edu/142927601/Th...

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