Socialist League Vpered

Socialist League «Vpered» (SDV; Russian: Cоциалистическое движение «Вперёд»; СДВ; Sotsialisticheskoye dvizheniye «Vperyod», SDV) ("Forward") was a radical left-wing political organisation in Russia. It was the Russian section of the reunified Fourth International.

Socialist League «Forward»
Социалистическое движение «Вперёд»
AbbreviationSDV (English)
СДВ (Russian)
LeaderCentral Council
FoundedSeptember 23, 2005 (2005-09-23)
DissolvedMarch 6, 2011 (2011-03-06)
Split fromSocialist Resistance
Merged intoRussian Socialist Movement
HeadquartersMoscow, Russia
NewspaperVperyod! (Forward!)
IdeologyTrotskyism
Eco-socialism
Socialist feminism
Political positionFar-left
International affiliationFourth International
Colours  Red
Slogan"Only forward!"
(Russian: "Только вперёд!")
Website
vpered.org.ru

History and activity edit

It was founded in 2005 as the split from Socialist Resistance, a Russian group then affiliated with the Committee for a Workers' International. In February 2008, it obtained permanent observer status in the Fourth International. In February 2010 it became the Russian section of the Fourth International.

VPERED had groups in a few of the country's cities: Moscow, Nizhny Novgorod, Saint Petersburg, Samara, Saratov, Tyumen, Yaroslavl and others. VPERED was actively involved in campaigns against governmental reform of education. The organisation was active inside some "alternative" trade unions, including the All-Russian Confederation of Labour and Defence of Labour.

VPERED published a paper under the same name. It participated in publishing trade-union magazine Svobodny Profsoyuz (Free Trade-Union) along with the All-Russian Confederation of Labour and left magazine Levaya Politika (Left politics) along with Boris Kagarlitsky and his Institute of Globalization and Social Movements.

Merger into the RSM edit

In 2011, Socialist League Vpered merged with two other Russian left-wing organizations, Socialist Resistance and the Revolutionary Workers' Party. The new organization was named the Russian Socialist Movement (RSM), with the Russian section of the Fourth International residing in the movement.

External links edit