Of the Democratic Socialists of America can be found here. Their manifesto:
"The Libertarian Socialist Caucus is an organization of members of the
Democratic Socialists of America who believe that libertarian socialist
values are the fullest embodiment of this democratic socialist vision.
We cherish the DSA’s status as a multi-tendency mass socialist
organization and wish to create a space within the DSA to discuss and
organize for the development of socialism beyond the state.
We take libertarian socialism to encompass those parts of the
socialist movement (including syndicalists, council communists,
anarchists, cooperativists, and municipalists, among many others) which
have historically seen the surest path to socialism as residing in the
creation of independent institutions in civil society that give the
working class and ordinary people direct power over their lives.
We believe in the socialist principles of common ownership and that
worker control over workplaces can only be advanced through the creation
and support of worker-owned firms, radical trade unions, workers’ and
neighborhood councils, popular assemblies, credit unions and alternative
banking systems, community land trusts, and other directly democratic
non-state institutions. The power of socialist parties and socialist
governments should be subordinate to these more decentralized grassroots
formations.
The Libertarian Socialist Caucus operates on three shared principles we see as inseparable from libertarian socialism:
FREEDOM refers to the positive capacity of all individuals and
communities for self-determination. We believe that the freedom enjoyed
by individuals is an inalienable social good and can only be
strengthened through solidarity and democracy.
SOLIDARITY refers to the understanding that all oppressed people—both
the economically exploited and the politically marginalized—share a
common struggle towards a free and equal society. We aim to organize our
movements accordingly, providing mutual aid and support to one another
and deferring to the initiative of those most affected by decisions, on
the principle that an injury to one is an injury to all.
DEMOCRACY refers to collective decision-making free from hierarchy,
domination, and coercion. Democracy is a social relation between free
individuals that should not be reduced solely to institutions or
elections. We believe that democracy is always a “work in progress” to
be altered or improved by communities according to their needs.
In accordance with these three fundamental values, the Libertarian
Socialist Caucus is suspicious of centralized forms of governance and
decision making processes that undermine freedom, solidarity, and
democracy. Instead, we wish to promote the ability of individuals and
communities to set their own priorities, both inside and outside the
DSA. Governing authority is illegitimate in itself and can only be
justified if it is delegated by and subordinated to a democratic
assembly. It is our belief that all political institutions must be held
to the highest standards of accountability, transparency, and
direct-democratic recall. We believe this vision can only be realized
through the abolition of classes, common ownership of the means of
production, and its democratic management to meet the needs of all.
Our particular vision of a libertarian socialist society—and the
specific path we intend to take to get there—will emerge out of the
discussions and activities of the LSC itself. We believe radical
democracy is an ongoing participatory process of deliberation,
renegotiation, and collective self-determination. It is for the people
themselves to decide what the world they wish to live in is to be. Our
inability to describe the precise contours of the liberated society is
rooted in the simple fact that democracy is inherently a work in
progress, continually created and recreated by its participants.
In short, wherever domination exists—of bosses over workers, of men
over women and gender nonconformists, of states over subjects, of whites
over people of color, of human society over the rest of the web of
life—we seek to replace it with equality, cooperation, love, and mutual
respect. Ours is a vision of total liberation, not just in some
far-flung revolutionary future but here and now."
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