NACLA Report on the Americas, March-April 1999 v32 i5 p30(7)
The virtues and misfortunes of civil society.
(Report on
Abstract: The economic reforms instituted in
Full Text: COPYRIGHT 1999 North American Congress on Latin
America Inc. (NACLA) The first time that I heard someone argue about the
importance of civil society in
The situation changed in the late 1980s, when Cuban society began to undergo a profound transformation as a result of the acute economic crisis and the gradual dismantling of prevailing forms of social and political control. The economic reforms implemented by the government to address the crisis - although different from the neoliberal reforms that other Latin American countries were implementing - opened considerable space for the market and the circulation of dollars, while undermining the average citizen's purchasing power. One of the most significant signs of this change has been the decline in the state's previously unchallenged capacity to control the distribution of resources, social and political discourse and ideological production.
The partial withdrawal of the state opened spaces that were filled by
associations, communication networks or simply aggregates of people. Independent
spaces for activities and debates that were unthinkable only a few years
earlier appeared, either as a result of the opening to the market or simply as
a result of the inability of the old ideological apparatuses to control the
whims of thought. A civil society demanding its own space began to emerge in
In the early 1990s, pronouncements about civil society were very cautious,
given the reticence of the people involved to discuss a subject that had been
harshly proscribed by Soviet Marxism and that had become the rallying cry of
those on the left and the right who had struggled against the recently defeated
Eastern European regimes. To make matters worse, it was also a topic that
appeared in the
Although these intellectuals and activists expressed a variety of opinions,
they all shared the same set of fundamental concerns. No one was worried about
defining what civil society in
It was not a coincidence. This new debate about civil society was
constrained by hostility from two fronts. On one side, there was the hostile
meddling of the
I confess that this debate did not interest me at first, which was a bad
miscalculation on my part. But in .1995, I wrote an article that was published
in a bulletin put out by a group of nongovernmental organizations.(1) These NGOs published my article even though my
perspective was quite different from theirs, a sign of tolerance and pluralism
that has not been very common in
The article turned out to be my last foray into the debate. In late 1995,
strong negative opinions against the idea of civil society surfaced within some
sectors of the Cuban political class. These opinions were encouraged by a climax
in
There was nothing objectionable about encouraging the development of spaces in civil society that favored a socialist program. The problem was that behind this declaration lay both a mistake and an unspoken intention. The mistake is elemental. Civil society is not a socialist construction simply because officials declare it to be so in a party forum, particularly since the state's own policies have generated segments of civil society that are linked to the market and capitalist accumulation which have nothing to do with socialist goals. The unspoken intention is even clearer. Behind this formulation lurks the desire of the bureaucracy to control civil society, to dictate what belongs and what does not, and therefore to exercise a sort of administrative control over its evolution. This illustrates Umberto Eco's remark that there is a short distance between the excess of virtue and the outbreak of sin.
What caused this clash between the Cuban political authorities and a segment of emerging civil society that was completely aligned with socialist goals and national independence? To answer this question, which I will try to do at the end of this article, we need to first analyze the anatomy of "really existing" Cuban civil society.
To do this, we need a working definition of the subject. Closely following political scientist Philip Oxhorn, I will define civil society as the social fabric formed by associations, communication channels and ordinary relationships, which are varied in their social composition and aims and co-exist in states of conflict, negotiation and agreement.(3) By definition, civil society is different from both the state and the market, but it is not necessarily opposed to these. Civil society may thus be seen as the interaction - in words or deeds - among groups that form new power relations or affect existing ones, either by consolidating or chipping away at them. At the same time, civil society in each place is a cultural and historical construct and is thus shaped by the national or local community in which it emerges.
This last distinction is vital for understanding the Cuban situation. Above
all, civil society in
In addition, there is within this emerging civil society a deep current of
popular consensus in support of the political system. This does not mean that
the predominant associations and discourses in Cuban civil society are merely
appendages of official discourse. They advocate greater autonomy in official
political structures, greater democracy and greater freedom of action and
discussion, among other things. But, if we exclude several segments of civil
society that oppose the system, it is not hard to see a high level of agreement
about crucial questions and activities that complement state actions. Support
for socialism, the defense of social equality and the repudiation of
When party officials, association leaders and academics discuss the vitality
of civil society, they routinely refer to one statistic: in
The majority of these legally registered organizations are cultural, sports or social organizations that do not have public influence beyond their small memberships. Some of these associations may project themselves more actively in the public arena in the future, but for now, the majority are irrelevant for the purposes of our analysis.
The case of the traditional mass organizations - officially recognized as the heart of "socialist civil society" - is more complex. Here we would include the diverse organizations whose common trait is their relationship with the state and the party as "transmission belts" according to the classic top-down scheme. Some of these organizations have millions of members, in particular the Committees in Defense of the Revolution, the Federation of Cuban Women and the Union of Cuban Workers. Other mass organizations, such as the different student organizations and the organization of small peasants, have smaller memberships. Finally, we would also include professional organizations in this "transmission belt" category.
In reality, these organizations constitute an imprecise threshold between civil society and the state, not because they share similar political alms but because of the negligible autonomy evident in their public stances on a variety of issues. In practice, however, these organizations do adopt their own positions on specific problems that affect their spheres of action. They regularly participate in decision making in arenas in which they have representation, and in some organizations a dynamic autonomy is visible among the rank and file. This is the case, for example, with the labor unions. Leaders are democratically elected, and the adoption of decisions and accords is based on broad participation in the decisionmaking process. This has made it possible for the rank and file of the trade unions to have a powerful impact on national policy, as occurred in 1994 when they impeded the government from imposing an income tax that was part of an adjustment package scheduled to go into effect that year.(4)
With the crisis, this tendency toward autonomy has been accentuated. This has been most evident in the trade unions and several professional organizations, particularly those connected to artistic and intellectual circles. Undoubtedly, the official policies of economic adjustment and reform will have an impact on the rank and file of these mass organizations. To what extent these organizations will prove capable of effectively representing the interests of their members in these new conditions, particularly if that means opposing certain state policies, will be a definitive test of their capacity for independent action.
The third component of civil society is comprised of a diverse group of churches and religious assemblies, some of which have become involved in social activities that extend beyond mere pastoral functions. This has been particularly the case since 1991. when the Fourth Communist Party Congress adopted a more flexible position concerning religion.
A majority of Cuban believers profess faith in the Afro-Cuban sects, which lack national or regional centers, making them atomized and extremely fluid in organizational terms. These religious sects nevertheless often serve as very effective informal networks for passing along information and for socialization at the community level. Today there is a tendency to involve Afro-Cuban religious authorities in cultural promotion and other aspects of local development in certain neighborhoods. These religious assemblies clearly possess a considerable ability to mobilize people-an ability that is bound to increase in the future.
The Catholic Church has experienced numerous ups and downs in its public
activity. Today, it faces favorable conditions both in terms of attracting new
followers and exerting greater influence over society, partly because of the
government's adoption of a more flexible attitude toward religion, and partly
because of the tendency to seek refuge in spiritual questions during moments of
intense crisis. In fact, the Church hierarchy has developed the most coherent -
and also the most viscerally reactionary - vision of civil society for
There are a small number of Protestant churches in
Other important actors within civil society are the NGOs, especially those
that are engaged in development work. While some observers put the number of
developmental NGOs across the country at around 50, there may in fact be no
more than two dozen, and some of them have very narrow roles or are really appendages
of state organizations with very little decision-making autonomy. The
developmental NGOs, which benefit from financial aid obtained from their
Canadian and European counterparts as well as from their contacts and exchanges
with other Latin American NGOs, have had a very significant qualitative impact
on Cuban society. By 1996, NGOs were involved in over 50 projects in six areas:
alternative energy, community development, the environment, popular education,
the promotion of women and institutional development. Habitat
Other actors to keep in mind are the community-based social movements that
began to emerge in the late 1980s with the goal of improving local
neighborhoods within a self-help model. The origin of these movements is
diverse, but almost all involved some state initiative, either by technical
agencies, municipal governments or popular councils. One of the most successful
is the El Condado movement in the city of
Over time, the agendas of such groups have diversified, encompassing not just local development, but also protecting the environment and reclaiming cultural identities. These groups also tend to become more autonomous, which exposes them to frequent run-ins with local authorities.(6)
Artistic and intellectual institutions are also significant. Many of these institutions tend to present themselves as key actors in the articulation of the new civil society and in the establishment of communication networks, whether because of the type of opinions they have, the debates they promote, or the social activism in which they are involved. The theater groups that have injected public opinion with critical appraisals of contemporary society and laudable displays of political valor are good examples here. Social research centers and cultural and academic publishing houses have also had a strong impact beyond the intellectual community. The academic journal Ternas, for example, which is published out of the Ministry of Culture since its founding in 1994, has had an enormous impact.
The process of economic reform has opened doors to new economic actors, derived from or intimately linked to the market, who are also important if embryonic actors in civil society. First, there are the agricultural cooperatives. Until recently, Cuban agriculture was organized into large unproductive state enterprises, in addition to small cooperative or individual peasant properties. In 1993, there was a profound restructuring of agriculture with the creation of Basic Units of Cooperative Production (UBPCs). Although there are no official statistics, it is estimated that there are close to 400,000 people working in the cooperative agriculture sector and that number will likely increase in the future.
Even though the creation of the UBPCs has been a laudable step forward in Cuban socialism, it is important to note that since their inception, the main emphasis of the new cooperatives has been productivity. This has given rise to oligarchic tendencies within their organizational structures, resulting in increasing inequality and predatory relations with other social groups. Economic success alone will not alter this situation; rather, the general political framework in which these cooperatives are inserted must actively promote alternative values and organizational structures. Not a single association of cooperative members exists. Cooperative members have been urged to affiliate with existing labor unions, which is in keeping with bureaucratic goals of political control but incongruent with the goals of both independent unions and cooperatives. This situation has hindered them from developing greater public autonomy, except in the local sphere.
Other potentially influential economic actors in civil society are the close to 200,000 legally registered self-employed workers. Most of these workers are individuals who depend for their survival on their own labor or that of family members and have little or no money to invest in their businesses. A small segment, however, is made up of people who run profitable enterprises, such as restaurants and room rentals. These people could become important economic actors when such activities become legal. To date, there are no organizations of self-employed workers. They have been urged instead - with very little success - to join existing labor unions.
The new technocratic business class linked to foreign investment and to national enterprises in dynamic economic areas may yet become more relevant in the new civil society. Individuals in this sector do not yet have a distinctive organizational structure. Even so, their particular social role gives them easy access to the state as well as a great capacity for social influence based simply on the demonstration of their personal success to a population impoverished by the crisis.
Is there a future for civil society? Of course there is. It is the playing field on which all the main actors in Cuban society operate. The question is what its purpose will be.
The Cuban political class has given one answer: creation by decree of a
controlled "socialist civil society." This is not completely off base
in my estimation. Nobody disputes the right of the state to protect national
sovereignty from the attempts of the
Analysts and those affected by the government crackdown have tended to
attribute the reaction of the Cuban political class to the predominance of
noncompetitive forms of exercising power. This argument has some merit. But if
we examine the course of Cuban politics in recent years, there is a notable
contrast between the caution the leadership expresses in the political field
and its considerable audacity in terms of the very controversial opening of the
Cuban economy to the capitalist world market. It is probably this latter point
that explains why the government is uneasy with a strong civil society in
contemporary
This is of course just one, if powerful, trend. There are others that are nourished by a civil society based on the social solidarity generated by four decades of socialist revolution, and by leaders and social activists who understand the meaning of the Marxist utopia, which holds that the free development of each one depends on the free development of all. These trends constitute the backbone of a larger story of dramatic events waged in the pursuit of freedom.
Not only is there a future for Cuban civil society, but there can be no
future without it. Only in that space can effective barriers be constructed to
withstand the market's colonization of daily life and to ensure that utopia is
not reduced to eating a hamburger. If, despite everything, the transition to
socialism fails in
NOTES
The Virtues and Misfortunes of Civil Society
1. Haroldo Dilla, "Sociedad civil, pueblo y participacion," Mensaje de Cuba, Centro de Estudios Europeos, No. 19-20, (Agosto/Septiembre de 1995), pp. 8-9.
2. "Informe del Buro Politico al V Pleno del Comite Central del Partido Comunista," in D. Dirmosser
and J. Estay, eds., Economia
y Reforma Economica en
3. Philip Oxhorn, Organizing Civil Society: The
Popular Sectors and the Struggle for Democracy in
4. I analyze the case of trade unions in "Comunidad,
participacion y socialismo:
Reinterpretando el dilema cubano," in Haroldo Dilla,
ed., La participacion en
5. Dagoberto Valdez and L. Estrella,
Reconstruir la sociedad
civil: Un proyecto para
6. Haroldo Dilla, et. al., Movimientos
comunitarios en
Haroldo Dilla is permanent
researcher at the
Translated from the Spanish by Deidre McFadyen.