World Socialist Party of India
World Socialist Party (India) | |
---|---|
Leader | none |
Founded | 1995 |
Ideology | Socialism, Marxism, Impossibilism |
International affiliation |
(World Socialist Movement 1995 - 2003 2014 -) |
Colours | red |
Website | |
http://www.worldsocialistpartyindia.org/ | |
The World Socialist Party (India) is a socialist party influenced by Marx in India since 1995.
History
Founded in March 1995 in Calcutta by members of the Marxist International Correspondence Circle (May 1990) in collaboration with the Bengali language journal Lal Pataka group (January 1983) having broken away from the Communist Party of India (Marxist) in 1982, the World Socialist Party (India) inaugurated on 1–3 March 1995 in the Students Hall, College Squire, Calcutta.
Adopting the Object and the Declaration of Principles as laid down in 1904 by the Socialist Party of Great Britain as the basis, the WSP (I) appreciates the SPGB for its opposition to the World Wars on grounds of class and description of Russia in 1918 as "State Capitalist". Like the SPGB, the WSP (I) has no leadership.
The World Socialist Party (India) was founded with the help of the Socialist Party of Great Britain and formally established themselves as a companion party of the World Socialist Movement in 1995.
In common with other parties of the WSM, the WSP (I) was formed as a revolutionary party opposed to Leninism, and seeking to win control of the state by parliamentary means in order to abolish it and establish socialism on a worldwide scale.
The party was the only World Socialist Party in Asia until 9th Annual Congress in February 2003 when it requested to affiliate to Socialist Studies which lasted for five years.[1] This resulted in a split called the World Socialist Group who remained with the World Socialist Movement.
However the WSP(I) applied to rejoin the WSM and was ratified by Executive Committee of the SPGB on 5 May 2014.[2]
Pamphlets
- History of Economics and "Modern Economics" (2016) Ambridge, Sarkar[3]
Bibliography
- Sarkar, Binay (2007). A Socialist Critique of the BBC, Albert Einstein, Amartya Sen and Muhammad Yunus. Avenel Press. ISBN 81-902529-2-5.
- Sarkar, Binay and Buick, Adam (2009). Marxian Economics and Globalization. Avenel Press. ISBN 81-902529-5-X.
- Sarkar, Binay and Buick, Adam (2012). MARXISM, LENINISM - POLES APART. Avenel Press. ISBN 978-93-80761-20-6.