Factory Committee

Factory committees were organized committees of factory workers that sprang up during the Russian Revolution of 1917. These committees were varied in origin and purpose, at times acting in a supervisory role over management, in other instances engaging in matters of collective bargaining and worker representation, and in some instances acting as rudimentary organs of workers' control.

Workers' control

While the majority of factory committees fulfilled union-type roles (indeed, many arose due to the illegality of unions in pre-revolutionary Russia), historians estimate that in 7–10% of cases, factory committees were the result of workers' take-over of the factory. Most factory committees of this type developed as a means by workers to counter lock-outs and/or sabotage by factory owners. As a June conference of factory committees resolution describes,
From the beginning of the Revolution the administrative staffs of the factories have relinquished their posts. The workmen have practically become the masters. To keep the factories going, the workers' committees have had to take the management into their own hands. In the first days of the Revolution, in February and March, the workmen left the factories and went into the streets. The factories stopped work. About a fortnight later, the mass of workmen returned to their work. They found that many factories had been deserted. The managers, engineers, generals, mechanics, foremen had reason to believe that the workmen would wreak their vengeance on them, and they had disappeared. The workmen had to begin work with no administrative staff to guide them. They had to elect committees which gradually re-established a normal system of work. The committees had to find the necessary raw materials, and altogether to take upon themselves all kinds of unexpected and unaccustomed duties." (Resolution adopted during May 30June 5 Conference of Factory Committees in Petrograd, quoted in S.O. Zagorsky, State Control of Russian Industry During the War, p. 174.)
Through the factory committees workers dealt primarily with immediate economic questions, such as planning production and allocating compensation for work. At times, factory committees grew to rival the power, prestige, and effectiveness of the soviets. Nearing the October revolution, factory committees continued to grow in size and scope, attracting (and influencing) anarchists and some Bolsheviks. Lenin, for example, considered abandoning the "All power to the soviets!" strategy for an "All power to the factory committees!" strategy as the revolution neared and some soviets were proving ineffective in his insurrection plans.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
crockenhill
list of first black major league baseball players by team and date
enns (city)
enns
john howard davies
detling
gull wing doors
pilgrims' way
no. 43 squadron raf
stormtrooper
gaius matius
thomas kinkade
looney tunes golden collection
arby's oven mitt
dunton green
rcj
dymchurch
mizrach
claude benton hudspeth
christopher galas
hollingbourne
anita desai
kemsing, kent
past teachings of prem rawat
yvert
fats pichon
piranha plant
buruli ulcer
serpentine gallery
makuria
robert d. haas
allan arbus
savski venac
neurodiversity
brown's representability theorem
jon hensley
mike smartt
fifehead magdalen
arnon grunberg
diplomatic corps
nolle prosequi
american dietetic association
anton corbijn
thomas berger