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| | International Socialist Organization - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Found in the writings of Tony Cliff, Michael Kidron, and others, state capitalist theory identifies the former Soviet Union and Eastern Bloc as exploitative, non-socialist class societies driven by military competition with private Western capitalism rather than as deformed workers' states, as held by the orthodox Trotskyist tradition. |
 | | After their split with the International Socialist Tendency, the ISO maintained or re-esteblished relationships with Socialist Alternative (Australia), International Workers' Left of Greece, the International Socialist Organization (New Zealand) and small groups in France and Italy, all of which had also broken with the IST. |
 | | In participating in the first World Social Forum in 2001, the ISO came in contact with the International Workers' League; the two groups collaborated on events in the 2002 World Social Forum and exchanged articles in their respective publications. |
| en.wikipedia.org /wiki/International_Socialist_Organization (1358 words) |
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