The Pyotr Alexeyev Resistance Movement (DSPA; ) was a left-wing political organization in Russia. It was created in 2004 by Dmitry Zhvania, a journalist and political activist from Saint Petersburg. The DSPA's main activities took place in Saint Petersburg, with several divisions in other cities. The movement was named after revolutionary worker Petr Alekseev.
DSPA members believed the expansion of capitalism leads to greater exploitation of poor people, the growth of social inequality, lost freedom and ecological disasters. The DSPA proposed an alternative society based on a socialist planned economy and rational use of resources with the mandatory cultivation of civil and working self-management.
The DSPA stood up for non-violent campaigns of direct action and socialist agitation, providing âÂÂhere and nowâ events using available resources. The movementâÂÂs ideology rejected the rise to power of the organized group. The main objective of the DSPAâÂÂs activities was organizing a large-scale civil resistance movement.
All decisions within the movement were taken by consensus. Anyone who agreed with the DSPAâÂÂs charter and participated in the movementâÂÂs actions was considered a DSPA member.
Before organizing its âÂÂhere-and-nowâ campaigns, the movement had a preparation period. During this period all members discussed the movementâÂÂs theory, ideology and practice, and established relations with other left-wing groups and organisations.
The main line of activity of the DSPA was street campaigns. On average, in a month the movement provided 3-4 âÂÂhere-and-nowâ actions. The DSPA considered that such actions would draw peopleâÂÂs attention to socially relevant issues, and made these issues a subject of public discussion.
Along with street campaigns, DSPA took part in labor movements and in civil initiatives directed against illegal construction. In 2011, DSPA representatives attended the founding conference of the Russian Socialist Movement.