communism
communism A social and political ideology advocating that authority and property be vested in the community, each member working for the common benefit according to capacity and receiving according to needs.
The ideal of communism has been embraced by many thinkers, including
PLATO, the early Christians and the 16th-century humanist Thomas More, who saw it as expressing man's social nature to the highest degree. It became the basis of a revolutionary movement through the work of Karl
MARX, who saw communism as the final outcome of the proletarian revolution that would overthrow
CAPITALISM. According to the theories of Marx, a communist society will emerge after the transitional period of the dictatorship of the proletariat and the preparatory stage of
SOCIALISM. In a fully communist society the state will, according to Marx, ‘wither away’ and all distinctions between social relations will disappear. Specifically communist parties did not emerge until after 1918, when extreme Marxists broke away from the
SOCIAL DEMOCRATS. Marx's theories were the moving force behind
LENIN and the
BOLSHEVIKS and the establishment of the political system in the
SOVIET UNION.
In the hands of
LENIN and his successors in the Soviet Union,
MARXISM was transformed into a doctrine justifying state control of all aspects of society. The doctrine had two main elements. The first was the leading role of the Communist Party, seen as representing the true interests of the working class. The party was to control the organs of the state, and was itself to be organized according to the principles of ‘democratic centralism’. The second major element in communist doctrine was the social ownership of property and central planning of the economy. In principle, all private ownership of the means of production and all elements of the market economy were to be abolished, and economic life was to be controlled by planning ministries, which would set production targets for factories and collective farms. Although this principle was never fully implemented, Soviet communism was a society whose every aspect was controlled by a small political élite (during the Stalinist period, 1928–53, by a single individual), and was thus the leading example of
TOTALITARIANISM. Its economic and military achievements nevertheless inspired revolutionary movements in many other countries, and in some developing countries, such as China, Vietnam, North Korea, and Cuba, communist parties came to power and established regimes based more or less closely on the Soviet model. In Eastern Europe, communist governments were installed under Soviet influence at the end of World War II. But the communist model was increasingly criticized in the West, even by those sympathetic to Marxism, for its economic inefficiency, its lack of genuine democracy, and its denial of basic human freedoms. During the 1980s this questioning of Soviet communism spread to Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union, culminating in a remarkable series of largely peaceful revolutions, which removed communist parties from power and opened the way to liberal democracy and the market economy.
Following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the communist countries of eastern Europe adopted pluralist, democratic systems.
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Tanger--Kenitra poised to start.(UIC HIGHSPEED)
Magazine article from: Railway Gazette International; 5/1/2008; 661 words
; ...completed by 2015. One line will run for 200 km from Tan-ger to Kenitra, and the other for 170 km from Settat to Marrakech. Between...project (RG 11.07 p673), El Amraoui expects the Tanger--Kenitra route to open in 2013. This will cut the Casablanca--Tanger...
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Morocco to build Kenitra power plant.
Newspaper article from: UMCI News (Potomac Falls, VA); 5/25/2009; 700+ words
; Summary: Morocco to build Kenitra power plant The Islamic Development Bank (IDB) Morocco 1.6 billion dirhams to build a gas turbine electricity station in Kenitra (40 km north of Rabat), MAP reported on Thursday (May 21st...
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Kenitra M. Davis.(Local)
Newspaper article from: The Virginian Pilot; 6/7/2008; 279 words
; ELIZABETH CITY - Kenitra Monique Davis, 32, of the 600 block of Factory St., died June 4, 2008. A funeral will be held Sunday at 2 p.m. in Holy Trinity Community Church. Stallings Funeral Home is in charge.
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After a day of worry, 3 missing girls return Dorchester teenager left with 2 toddlers
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 11/18/1997; ; 700+ words
; ...into high gear. Thirteen-year-old Kenitra Newton walked into the house with her...fliers with the names and pictures of Kenitra and the younger girls, Shantel and Shant...just as they walked through the door. "Kenitra was crying when she came in," said Gladys...
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Teenager says stay at friend's home was `against my will'
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 11/19/1997; ; 668 words
; ...because he could have taken me home," said Kenitra Newton, who returned at about 8:30...when they climbed into a car driven by Kenitra's friend of three months. She said...filed against anyone. The friend, whom Kenitra would not identify, had picked up her...
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Troubled teen returns after leaving with tots.
Newspaper article from: The Boston Herald; 11/18/1997; ; 700+ words
; ...time," police and family members said. Kenitra Newton, a troubled teen with a history...about where they had been. Relatives said Kenitra Newton and the younger girls were fine...something different," said Vivian Phifer, Kenitra's aunt. "She was just out having a...
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Morocco Inmates Discuss Life Behind Bars
News Wire article from: AP Online; 5/10/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...Morocco "This is Omar Maarouf calling from Kenitra Central Prison," said the dejected voice...from a prisoner inside the high-walled Kenitra, one of Morocco's most notorious lockups...Goumarra, serving a life sentence at Kenitra, called a day earlier, also without...
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Two inmates speak of life in one of Morocco's most notorious prisons
News Wire article from: AP Worldstream; 5/11/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...Morocco "This is Omar Maarouf calling from Kenitra Central Prison," said the dejected voice...from a prisoner inside the high-walled Kenitra, one of Morocco's most notorious lockups...Goumarra, serving a life sentence at Kenitra, called a day earlier, also without...
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2 Inmates Speak of Life in Morocco Prison
News Wire article from: AP Online; 5/11/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...Goumarra is serving a life sentence at Kenitra, one of Morocco's most notorious prisons...This is Omar Maarouf calling from Kenitra Central Prison," said the dejected voice...from a prisoner inside the high-walled Kenitra, one of Morocco's most notorious lockups...
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Perak likely to sign on Galvao
Newspaper article from: New Straits Times; 2/1/2003; 374 words
; ...the Brazilian help the Premier One champions hold Renaissance Sportive Kenitra (PSK) 1-1 in their first of the two friendly matches played in Kenitra in in Morocco. Kenitra is 30km from the capital Rabat. A source close to the Perak Football...
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Kenitra
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Kenitra , city (1994 pop. 292,627), NW Morocco, on the Sebou River. It is a port exporting agricultural products. The city was built by the French and called by them Port Lyautey. American troops landed there in Nov., 1942, during World War II.
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Gharb
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North Africa
...division of water and forests. The cities of the Gharb are Mechra Bel Ksiri, Sidi Sliman, Sidi Yahya, and Kenitra. Except for Kenitra, which is located on the margin of the region, the Gharb has not experienced the development of any major...
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Port Lyautey
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Port Lyautey see Kenitra , Morocco.
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Morocco: Overview
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North Africa
...include Marrakech (746,000), Oujda (679,000), Agadir (550,000) Meknes (530,000), Tangiers (526,000), Kenitra (449,000), BeniMellal (387,000) and Safi (376,000). The population growth rate is 1.9 percent. Nearly 48 percent...
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Morocco
Encyclopedia entry from: Cities of the World
...Cities: Rabat, Casablanca, Tangier, Marrakech, Fez, Mekn è s, Oujda Other Cities: Agadir, Ceuta, El Jadida, Kenitra, Safi, T é touan EDITOR'S NOTE This chapter was adapted from the Department of State Post Report 1999 for Morocco...
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