Small square Fabian logo    The NZ Fabian Society is an independent membership based policy forum providing open, pluralist space for education and debate on progressive policies. We aim to apply progressive values to contemporary issues.  
  • Upcoming Event: Maxing Out - Next Steps for Progressives

    Max Harris and Max Rashbrooke will discuss how we turn around the right wing slogans like nanny statewoke identity politics, and the inefficiency of the public sector – and how we build a progressive agenda.

    From Donald Trump to David Seymour, from Peter Dutton to Christopher Luxon, we are subject to a flood of measures designed to give more power to corporate interests. The measures are accompanied by a deluge of slogans and attacks on so-called woke culture and on big government.  Trump has even blamed a plane crash on diversity programmes.  

    Actual evidence is disregarded; in fact science, medicine and academia are targets.

    Max Rashbrooke uses the push for privatisation as a case study; Max Harris looks at the push-back against the Treaty.  

    They go further and discuss ways  we can more effectively formulate progressive ideas and build a progressive movement.

     

    April 23rd, 2025 from  5:30 PM to  7:00 PM
     
    2/57 Willis St
    Via the lifts at the back of Unity Books
    WellingtonWGN
    New Zealand
     
  • Emeritus Professor Jane Kelsey - Transformative Change

    KelseyJane Kelsey likens our present circumstances to Gramsci’s interregnum. He said in 1930 “the crisis consists precisely in the fact that the old is dying and the new cannot be born: in this interregnum a great variety of morbid symptoms appear”. Kelsey outlines five morbid symptoms that we are experiencing:

    1. The collapse of the old;
    2. The fracturing of traditional party politics of centre left and centre right accompanied by the rise of autocrats determined to bypass structures;
    3. Orchestrated anarchy in the media which has been aided by post human technology such as AI and controlled by unaccountable elites;
    4. The calculated revictimization of indigenous people, migrants, refugees and workers and a new rationalisation for the same old appropriation of profit and resources that has been part of capitalism forever; and,
    5. The systematic destruction of redistributive and social policies that previously stabilised the inequalities of capitalism and secured some notions of social licence.


    She argues that there is currently a contest between the status quo and the disruption, driven by oligarchs and organic intellectuals. Political party institutions are failing because they adhere to the status quo. She argues that business as usual is not tenable and this provides challenge and opportunities for those seeking change from the sclerotic status quo. However, she questions whether the Labour Party is preparing for this new situation.

    Her paper is in three parts: an overview of the collapse of Western hegemony, industrial and financial capital and liberal democracy leading to anarchy, autocracy and imperialism; our own homegrown version of neo-colonial disruption, destruction and corruption, and the remaking of the state in the 1980s and 90s; and, how to confront the long and short term challenges.

    The full paper can be read here.