Democratic Autonomy in North Kurdistan

The Council Movement, Gender Liberation, and Ecology — in Practice

Written by TATORT Kurdistan Translated by Janet Biehl

In order to find a peaceful solution to the Kurdish question, the Kurdish Freedom Movement in Turkey has developed an alternative social model: Democratic Autonomy.

In the fall of 2011, a group of TATORT activists journeyed into the Kurdish regions of Turkey to learn how the theory of Democratic Autonomy was being put into practice. They discovered a remarkable experiment in face-to-face democracy—all the more notable for being carried out in wartime.

Since 2005, under the most difficult of conditions, the movement in North Kurdistan has created structures for a democratic, ecological and gender-liberated society. At its core is a system of councils in villages, cities, and neighborhoods. These structures do not yet offer a way of life that is fully independent of the nation-state and the market economy, but they nonetheless reveal a potent civil counter-power.

The interviews and documentation in this book provide thought-provoking glimpses into the practical implementation of a new left vision. The radical democratic awakening of the Kurds may serve as an inspiration for social change in the Middle East and elsewhere.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

TATORT Kurdistan (Crime Scene Kurdistan) is a campaign that seeks to raise awareness of the historic plight of the Kurds, to document the role of German firms and government in the Turkish-Kurdish conflict, and to organize protests in Germany.

Janet Biehl (1953—) is an author, copy editor, and graphic artist living in Burlington, Vermont. Her books include Finding Our Way: Rethinking Ecofeminist Politics (Black Rose Books, 1991); The Politics of Social Ecology: Libertarian Municipalism (Black Rose Books, 1998);  The Murray Bookchin Reader (editor) (Cassell, 1997); Mumford Gutkind Bookchin: The Emergence of Eco-decentralism (New Compass, 2011); Ecofascism Revisited: Lessons from the German Experience (New Compass, 2011); Ecology or Catastrophe: The Life of Murray Bookchin (Oxford University Press, 2015); Their Blood Got Mixed: A Graphic Journey to the Multiethnic Democracy in Northeast Syria (PM Press, 2021).

Language: English
Publisher: New Compass Press
Release year: 2013
Pages: 212
Formats: Paperback; Ebook
Print ISBN: 978-82-93064-26-8
Ebook ISBN: 978-82-93064-27-5

Table of Contents:

Translator's Note

Foreword

Introduction: Democratic Confederalism

1. Councils Under Construction

2. The Kurdish Youth Movement

3. Economic Alternatives

4. Changing Gender Relations

5. Social Ecological Transformation

6. Education for a New Society

Glossary

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