So, how did Yugoslavia's experience in worker's self-management, to a certain degree, differ from the Soviet Union or the People's Republic of China? For those who noticed the name, but maybe didn't look it up, who is Milovan Djilas, and what was his analysis of the twentieth-century social experiments in the Soviet Union and China?Īnd then given that he's from Yugoslavia, Yugoslavia had its own sort of tradition, you know, that made it different than the Soviet Union and China in terms of its attempt at some kind of worker self-management while still kind of under the rule of a powerful communist party. KEVIN GUSTAFSON: You do name-drop somebody who is maybe not as well-known to socialists and non-socialists alike, which is Milovan Djilas. In part two of this episode, Professor Richard Wolff continues with Sensible Socialist about Yugoslavia, Milovan Djilas, and socialist movements.
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