On 14-15 November transform! europe, Rosa Luxemburg Foundation Brussels and Left Forum, Finland, co-organize a 2 days workshop in which the phenomenon of social democracy will be analyzed under the scope of the Radical Left.
It is a common ground for politicians and political scientists as well, that European social democracy is currently undergoing the most serious crisis after the postwar era. The decline of the Social Democracy is not only a conclusion that comes up only from the elections’ results and the breakdown of the votes, though this aspect is obviously crucial and reveals the current potentiality of the Social Democracy to be a governmental political power.
The social democratic defeat results from various factors with the most outstanding point to be the surrender to the neoliberal order. Social democracy used to be the political narrative which represents the interests of the working class within the post-war settlement. Social democratic parties were responsible to materialize the social contract between the capital and the working class and to establish peace, democracy, solidarity and social justice in Europe. However for the last 30 years a turn of social democratic strategy has been unfolded with significant consequences not only for the social democratic parties, but also for the political systems in Europe and the representative democracy in general. Social democratic parties in power implemented neoliberal policies and abandoned their principles claiming “there is no alternative” and declaring that the wealth produced through neoliberal capitalism would trickle down.
The economic crisis worsened the representation relations between the social democratic parties and their traditional audiences. Some social democratic parties were at the wheel while the crisis flared and their direct response was the –accordant to the EU’s mind- implementation of austerity policies through bail-out programs, the mass privatizations of public enterprises and services, the pension cuts, the reduction of the legal minimum wage and tax increases. As for the social democrats that were in the opposition, their stance did not differ from the right-wing parties’ position. Since social democracy has accepted the neoliberal doctrine in the EU, it was quite hard to juxtapose an alternative to austerity and authoritarization.
In this particular context Radical Left appears in many European countries as the only credible alternative and the contender of traditional social alliances of social-democracy. The important electoral rise of the radical left in different countries launches the debate for the relations between radical left and social-democracy. Specifically, it creates prospective for possible convergences or divergences between the two political actors but also a discourse for the limits of their alliances.
transform! finds itself in the vanguard of developments and wishes to inaugurate the dialogue by organizing a workshop in Helsinki in which the phenomenon of social democracy will be analyzed under the scope of the Radical Left in order to analyze the depth of rivalry or proximity of the two political actors (or trends).
* Evan Brzostowski is founder of theleftofdeviantart.deviantart.com.
Programme
Monday, 14 November
09:30 – 12:00
Opening Session: An Overview of the Historical, Ideological and Political Process of European Social Democracy and a mapping of the present situation – Moderator:Martin Schirdewan, Rosa Luxemburg Foundation – Brussels Office, Director
Richard Detje, Sozialismus Journal, Hamburg
Cornelia Hildebrandt, Institute of Social Analysis, Rosa Luxemburg Foundation, Berlin
12:00 – 13:30 Lunch
13:30 – 16:30 Case studies – Moderator: Veronika Sušová-Salminen, Historian, Political Analyst, Finland/Czech Republic
Social Democracy in Italy: Marco Revelli, Historian and Sociologist
Social Democracy in Germany:Stefan Stache / Max Reinhardt, Publishers, Berlin
Social Democracy in Central and Eastern Europe:Dieter Segert, Professor, University of Vienna
18:00 – 19:30
The Political Situation in Finland – Moderator: Florian Horn, Rosa Luxemburg Foundation – Brussels Office
Jukka Pietiläinen, Director of Left Forum, Helsinki
19:30 Dinner
Tuesday, 15 November
09:30 -12:00
Social Democracy and the Crises in Europe – Moderator:Cornelia Hildebrandt, Institute of Social Analysis, Rosa Luxemburg Foundation, Berlin
Gerassimos Moschonas, Associate Professor of Comparative Politics, Panteion University, Athens
Walter Baier, Political Coordinator of transform! europe, Vienna
12:00 – 13:30 Lunch
13:30 – 15:30 Case studies – Moderator: Angelina Giannopoulou, transform! europe, Athens
Social Democracy in Sweden: Petter Nilsson, Board Member of the Centre for Marxist Social Studies, Sweden
Social Democracy in Greece:Michalis Spourdalakis, Professor, Dean, School of Economics and Political Sciences, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
Social Democracy in the UK (The Labour Party): Richard Seymour, Writer, UK
15.30 – 16.00 Short Break
16.00 – 17:00 Conclusions and Follow-Up – Moderator: Walter Baier, Political Coordinator of transform! europe, Vienna
Haris Golemis, Scientific and Strategic Advisor of transform! europe, Director of Nicos Poulantzas Institute, Athens
17:30 – 19:30 Roundtable: Radical Left and Social Democracy: Far or Close? – Moderator: Haris Golemis, Scientific ans Strategic Advisor of tranform! europe, Director of Nicos Poulantzas Institute, Athens
Joonas Leppänen, Secretary of Left Alliance, Phd in Political Science
Hanna Lichtenberger, Political Scientist, University of Vienna
Victor Alonso Rocafort, Coordinator of the Parliamentarian Group of Izquierda Unida, Phd in Political Theory, Madrid
Hilary Wainwright, Co-editor of Red Pepper Magazine, Fellow of the Transnational Institute
20.00 Dinner