Abstract

This article aims to understand how university student collectives organize themselves based on strategies, struggles, resistance and biopolitical production. Of a theoretical nature, we resorted mainly to the concepts of multitude, common and immaterial work elaborated by Antonio Negri and Michael Hardt. Such theoretical assumptions help us to understand the configuration and organization of these new clusters. What was evidenced based on what was built during the theoretical path undertaken in the present work was the emergence of new forms of collective production that enable an environment of plural and democratic coexistence and whose purpose is the production of the common.

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