Part, Chap., §
1 Messag | psychological, cultural, political and socio-economic development
2 Messag, 1, 1 | optimistic illusions of many political opponents of the SP, illusions
3 Messag, 1, 2 | systematically deduces its entire political, economic and social program
4 Messag (1) | 1971. Since then the new political organization has been publishing
5 Messag (1) | than a mere program of a political party. It encompasses a
6 Messag, 1, 3 | instead of making use of their political liberties to mount an orderly
7 Messag, 2, 1 | process of taking - the political leveling of classes to its
8 Messag (4) | free themselves from it: political emancipation. They are dependent
9 Messag (4) | is true human justice. A political and social organization
10 Messag, 2, 2 | the radically egalitarian political heritage that was built
11 Messag (11)| tance, the heritage of the political democracy inaugurated by
12 Messag, 2, 4 | types of aristocracy in the political sphere. Similarly, the Program
13 Messag, 2, 4 | consequence of the people's political sovereignty. According to
14 Messag (16)| Economic democracy and political democracy are indissociable;
15 Messag (16)| democracy are indissociable from political democracy " (Documentation
16 Messag (23)| well that the answer is a political and global one. It is by
17 Messag, 2, 11 | application of the standards of political democracy to the economic
18 Messag (36)| run without the need for a political apparatus or state coercion ....~''
19 Messag (36)| gradually fade away when political power ceases to be necessary.
20 Messag (36)| turn, the strengthening of political power. Hence there is no
21 Messag, 3, 2 | economy, social organization, political totalitarianism, perpetua
22 Messag (46)| Mitterrrand, and is of decisive political importance. Many more than
23 Messag, 4 | socialist victory in the political and cultural life of the
24 Messag (47)| in France has "an immense political value in Nicaragua and Latin
25 1, 3 | choices on the different political levels are made through
26 Author | sensuality, and use sophistry, political intrigue and economic pressure
27 Author | witnessing, is not above all a political or sociological phenomenon,
28 Author | and culture, and into the political, social and economic order
29 Author | newspapers. There he takes up political, sociological and religious
30 Author | printings in twenty months. Political commentators affirmed that
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