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International Workingmen's Association

Redirected from International Working Mens' Association The International Workingmen's Association was an international group of socialists. Originally, it contained socialists of all kinds, including libertarian socialists (known by various names, including anarchists, anarcho-communists and Bakuninists) as well as the more authoritarian Marxists and social democrats.

Table of contents
1 First International

    First International 

The Schism

The First International was split into two after Mikhail Bakunin, the foremost anarchist, and Karl Marx differed on both principles and practical courses of action.

    Second International 

The Second International is a collection of moderate leftist political parties. For example, the British Labour Party and the German Social Democrats are affiliated to it.

    Third International 

The Third International was the Communist International. Commonly referred to as Comintern, it was created at the behest of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union for the express purpose of establishing Communist Parties in countries across the world. The first Communist International meeting was held in Moscow on March 2, 1917.

    Fourth International 

The Fourth International was created in 1938 by Leon Trotsky. It represents the Trotskyite strain of Communist though, particularly Trotsky's ideas of Permanent Revolution.