Katana VentraIP

Class conflict

In political science, the term class conflict, or class struggle, refers to the political tension and economic antagonism that exist among the social classes of society, because of socioeconomic competition for resources among the social classes, between the rich and the poor. In the political and economic philosophies of Karl Marx and Mikhail Bakunin, class struggle is a central tenet and a practical means for effecting radical sociopolitical changes for the social majority, the working class.[1] It is a central concept within conflict theories of sociology and political philosophy.

Several terms redirect here. For other uses, see Class war (disambiguation) and Class Struggle (disambiguation).

The forms of class conflict include direct violence, such as wars, for access to and control of natural resources and labour; assassinations and revolution; indirect violence, such as death from poverty and starvation, illness and unsafe working conditions; economic coercion, such as the threat of unemployment and capital flight, the withdrawal of investment capital; and ideologically, by way of political literature.


The political forms of class conflict include lobbying (legal and illegal) and bribery of legislators. The social-class conflict can be direct, as in a dispute between labour and management such as an employer's industrial lockout of their employees in effort to weaken the bargaining power of the corresponding trade union; or indirect such as a workers' slowdown of production in protest against unfair labor practices, low wages, and poor working conditions.

The wealthy aristocratic party of the plain

The poor common party of the mountains

The moderate party of the coast

[15]

The patricians had much too easy access to positions of public service.

The granted the consuls far too much power.

constitution

The plebs were constantly verbally slighted.

The plebs had too little power in their assemblies.

[18]

Labour (the or workers) includes anyone who earns their livelihood by selling their labor power and being paid a wage or salary for their labor time. They have little choice but to work for capital, since they typically have no independent way to survive.

proletariat

Capital (the or capitalists) includes anyone who gets their income not from labor as much as from the surplus value they appropriate from the workers who create wealth. The income of the capitalists, therefore, is based on their exploitation of the workers (proletariat).

bourgeoisie

Twentieth and twenty-first centuries[edit]

Soviet Union and similar societies[edit]

A variety of thinkers, mostly Trotskyist and anarchist, argue that class conflict existed in Soviet-style societies. Their arguments describe as a class the bureaucratic stratum formed by the ruling political party (known as the nomenklatura in the Soviet Union), sometimes termed a "new class",[61] that controls and guides the means of production. This ruling class is viewed to be in opposition to the remainder of society, generally considered the proletariat. This type of system is referred by them as state socialism, state capitalism, bureaucratic collectivism or new class societies. Marxism was already a powerful ideological power in Russia before the Soviet Union was created in 1917, since a Marxist group known as the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party existed. This party soon divided into two main factions; the Bolsheviks, who were led by Vladimir Lenin, and the Mensheviks, who were led by Julius Martov.


However, many Marxists argue that unlike in capitalism, the Soviet elites did not own the means of production, or generated surplus value for their personal wealth like in capitalism as the generated profit from the economy was equally distributed into Soviet society.[62] Even some Trotskyist like Ernest Mandel criticized the concept of a new ruling class as an oxymoron, saying: "The hypothesis of the bureaucracy's being a new ruling class leads to the conclusion that, for the first time in history, we are confronted with a 'ruling class' which does not exist as a class before it actually rules."[63]

United States[edit]

In the U.S., class conflict is often noted in labor/management disputes. As far back as 1933 representative Edward Hamilton of the Airline Pilot's Association, used the term "class warfare" to describe airline management's opposition at the National Labor Board hearings in October of that year.[64] Apart from these day-to-day forms of class conflict, during periods of crisis or revolution class conflict takes on a violent nature and involves repression, assault, restriction of civil liberties, and murderous violence such as assassinations or death squads.[65]


The investor, billionaire, and philanthropist Warren Buffett, one of the wealthiest people in the world,[66] voiced in 2005 and once more in 2006 his view that his class, the "rich class", is waging class warfare on the rest of society. In 2005 Buffet said to CNN: "It's class warfare, my class is winning, but they shouldn't be."[67] In a November 2006 interview in The New York Times, Buffett stated that "[t]here’s class warfare all right, but it’s my class, the rich class, that’s making war, and we’re winning."[68]

Class collaboration

Classism

Critique of political economy

Criticism of capitalism

Critique of work

Economic stratification

Master-slave dialectic

Abidor, Mitchell, ed. (2016). . PM Press. ISBN 978-1629631127.

Death to Bourgeois Society: The Propagandists of the Deed

(1934). Dynamite: The Story of Class Violence in America (Revised ed.).

Adamic, Louis

Antell, Gerson; Harris, Walter (2007). Economics For Everybody. Amsco School Publications.  978-1-56765-640-4.

ISBN

Dahrendorf, Ralf (1959). . Stanford University Press. ISBN 0804705615. (also available in hardback as ISBN 0804705607, 1131155734).

Class & Class Conflict in Industrial Society

Faux, Jeff (2006). . John Wiley and Sons. ISBN 978-0471697619.

The Global Class War: How America's Bipartisan Elite Lost Our Future and What It Will Take to Win It Back

Klein, Matthew C.; Pettis, Michael (2020). . Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300244175.

Trade Wars Are Class Wars: How Rising Inequality Distorts the Global Economy and Threatens International Peace

Li Yi (2005). The Structure and Evolution of Chinese Social Stratification. University Press of America.  0761833315.

ISBN

Maavak, Mathew (December 2012). (PDF). Journal of Futures Studies. 17 (2): 15–36. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 October 2017.

"Class Warfare, Anarchy and the Future Society"

Ness, Immanuel, ed. (2009). The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest: 1500 to the Present. Malden, MA: Wiley & Sons.

(2014). New Forms of Worker Organization: The Syndicalist and Autonomist Restoration of Class-Struggle Unionism. PM Press. ISBN 978-1604869569. Archived from the original on 29 March 2019. Retrieved 2 August 2018.

Ness, Immanuel

Tranjan, Ricardo (2023). The Tenant Class. Between the Lines.  978-1771136228.

ISBN

Vasudevan, Ramaa (2019). . Catalyst. 3 (1): 110–139.

"The Global Class War"

Zeilig, Leo, ed. (2002). Class Struggle and Resistance in Africa. New Clarion Press.

– video report by Democracy Now!

2008-2010 Study: CEOs Who Fired Most Workers Earned Highest Pay

. Vice, 26 November 2018.

How a Real Class War, Like with Guns, Could Actually Happen