- International Socialist Organisation (Australia)
:"This article is about the International Socialist Organisation in Australia. See also the
International Socialist Organization ."The International Socialist Organisation is an
Australia nTrotskyist political organisation. It is part of theInternational Socialist Tendency and produces a newspaper called "Socialist Worker (Australian) ". It has active branches in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane and Perth with a number of supporters in Canberra.It was founded in the early 1970s, as the International Socialists, and expanded from its initial base in
Melbourne until it had branches in every major city. It has had a lively internal life and saw a breakaway faction in the 1980s calledSocialist Action led byTom O'Lincoln which later rejoined the IS. At this point they changed their name to the ISO.A faction fight beginning in 1993 led to a split, mainly but not exclusively in Melbourne, out of which Socialist Alternative was formed in
1995 . Another period of internal crisis beginning in 2001 led to a loss of members and a further split in2003 when another grouping of members around former leaderIan Rintoul left to form a group known as "Solidarity". Somewhat prior to this Tom O'Lincoln also left, eventually joining Socialist Alternative. The ISO was a part of the Socialist Alliance but at its national conference in 2007 voted to withdraw its involvement criticising the failure of the project to achieve its intended goals and the role of theDemocratic Socialist Perspective in that failure.The organisation has built a history of supporting militant direct action that has separated it from the other major organisation on the left the
DSP Fact|date=June 2008. It was active in theRight to March campaigns in Brisbane under theJoh Bjelke-Petersen government. It was part ofAction against Racism which physically confronted the rise of the racist group One Nation led byPauline Hanson and was a driving force behind the 2000 S11 demonstrations in Melbourne that disrupted a meeting of theWorld Economic Forum .The organisation's main priority since 2003 has been building the anti-war movement to oppose the Australian government's involvement with the
occupation of Iraq . The group has been vocal in its indentifying the need to fightIslamophobia and work alongside the Islamic community in Australia.It has argued consistently that the anti war movement needs to build a broad based
United Front against the war. It has identified building locality based Peace groups, in Brisbane Southside, Moreland, Newtown and Leichhart and the Just Peace group in Perth, as a way of building networks of anti war activists. These groups have been relatively successful.During 2006, the ISO helped organise a national anti-war conference named "Unity for Peace" in an attempt to broaden the anti-war movement's base of support. The conference was well attended by approximately 60 organisations and attracted 350 people. One initiative from the conference was to set up a national
Unity For Peace steering committee. However, the attempt to set up a national network around Unity for Peace has floundered as a result of the very limited resources of the ISO and the failure to convince broader layers to participate in the project on an active basis.The conference was the culmination of a speaking tour of the US anti War activist
Cindy Sheehan andDr Salem Ismael from theDoctors for Iraq organisation which attracted large audiences in most major capitals in Australia.The organisation's project has been to build a strong revolutionary socialist organisation whilst at the same time attempt to intervene and play a leading role in
social movements . This has meant shifting the organisation away from the sectarian and abstract propaganda routine that characterised it during the 1980s. However, the changes in the organisation has not been without some mistakes.The ISO has identified university campuses as a key area in which to rebuild the organisation. It has decided to focus on building at
Melbourne University ,Sydney Uni andGriffith University in Brisbane.On February 3, 2008, the ISO, the
Socialist Action Group and Solidarity agreed to merge, with the new organization to be named "Solidarity" [<]Links
* [http://www.iso.org.au ISO Australia]
* [http://www.socialistworker.org.au Socialist Worker Australia]
* [http://www.istendency.net International Socialist Tendency]
References
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