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Anarchism in the United States, the Glossary

Index Anarchism in the United States

Anarchism in the United States began in the mid-19th century and started to grow in influence as it entered the American labor movements, growing an anarcho-communist current as well as gaining notoriety for violent propaganda of the deed and campaigning for diverse social reforms in the early 20th century.[1]

Table of Contents

  1. 526 relations: A. Mitchell Palmer, Abbie Hoffman, ABC News (United States), ABC No Rio, Abolitionism in the United States, Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum, Acquiescence, Activism, Ad hoc, Adbusters, Adolf Brand, Aesthetics, Affinity group, Aftermath of World War II, AK Press, Albert Einstein, Albert Parsons, Alexander Berkman, Alfred A. Knopf, Allen Ginsberg, Alter-globalization, Alternative Media Project, Alternative Press Review, American Civil War, American Federation of Labor, American Left, Ammon Hennacy, Anarcha-feminism, Anarchism, Anarchism (Eltzbacher book), Anarchism and issues related to love and sex, Anarchism in Italy, Anarchism in Spain, Anarchism in the United States, Anarchism without adjectives, Anarchist Black Cross, Anarchist communism, Anarchist Portraits, Anarchist Studies, Anarcho-naturism, Anarcho-pacifism, Anarcho-primitivism, Anarcho-syndicalism, Anarcho-Syndicalist Review, Anarchy (magazine), Andrea Salsedo, Angela Heywood, Anti-authoritarianism, Anti-capitalism, Anti-clericalism, ... Expand index (476 more) »

  2. 1820s establishments in the United States
  3. Left-wing politics in the United States

A. Mitchell Palmer

Alexander Mitchell Palmer (May 4, 1872 – May 11, 1936) was an American attorney and politician who served as the 50th United States attorney general from 1919 to 1921.

See Anarchism in the United States and A. Mitchell Palmer

Abbie Hoffman

Abbot Howard Hoffman (November 30, 1936 – April 12, 1989) was an American political and social activist who co-founded the Youth International Party ("Yippies") and was a member of the Chicago Seven.

See Anarchism in the United States and Abbie Hoffman

ABC News (United States)

ABC News is the news division of the American television network ABC.

See Anarchism in the United States and ABC News (United States)

ABC No Rio

ABC No Rio is a collectively-run non-profit arts organization on New York City's Lower East Side.

See Anarchism in the United States and ABC No Rio

Abolitionism in the United States

In the United States, abolitionism, the movement that sought to end slavery in the country, was active from the colonial era until the American Civil War, the end of which brought about the abolition of American slavery, except as punishment for a crime, through the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution (ratified 1865). Anarchism in the United States and abolitionism in the United States are political movements in the United States.

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Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum

The Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum documents the life of the 16th U.S. president, Abraham Lincoln, and the course of the American Civil War.

See Anarchism in the United States and Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum

Acquiescence

In law, acquiescence occurs when a person knowingly stands by, without raising any objection to, the infringement of their rights, while someone else unknowingly and without malice aforethought acts in a manner inconsistent with their rights.

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Activism

Activism (or advocacy) consists of efforts to promote, impede, direct or intervene in social, political, economic or environmental reform with the desire to make changes in society toward a perceived greater good.

See Anarchism in the United States and Activism

Ad hoc

Ad hoc is a Latin phrase meaning literally for this.

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Adbusters

The Adbusters Media Foundation is a Canadian-based not-for-profit, pro-environment organization founded in 1989 by Kalle Lasn and Bill Schmalz in Vancouver, British Columbia.

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Adolf Brand

Gustav Adolf Franz Brand (14 November 1874 – 2 February 1945) was a German writer, egoist anarchist, and pioneering campaigner for the acceptance of male bisexuality and homosexuality.

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Aesthetics

Aesthetics (also spelled esthetics) is the branch of philosophy concerned with the nature of beauty and the nature of taste; and functions as the philosophy of art.

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Affinity group

An affinity group is a group formed around a shared interest or common goal, to which individuals formally or informally belong.

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Aftermath of World War II

The aftermath of World War II saw the rise of two superpowers, the Soviet Union (USSR) and the United States (US).

See Anarchism in the United States and Aftermath of World War II

AK Press

AK Press is a worker-managed, independent publisher and book distributor that specializes in publishing books about anarchism and the radical left.

See Anarchism in the United States and AK Press

Albert Einstein

Albert Einstein (14 March 1879 – 18 April 1955) was a German-born theoretical physicist who is widely held as one of the most influential scientists. Best known for developing the theory of relativity, Einstein also made important contributions to quantum mechanics. His mass–energy equivalence formula, which arises from relativity theory, has been called "the world's most famous equation".

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Albert Parsons

Albert Richard Parsons (June 20, 1848 – November 11, 1887) was a pioneering American socialist and later anarchist newspaper editor, orator, and labor activist.

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Alexander Berkman

Alexander Berkman (November 21, 1870June 28, 1936) was a Russian-American anarchist and author.

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Alfred A. Knopf

Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. is an American publishing house that was founded by Blanche Knopf and Alfred A. Knopf Sr. in 1915.

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Allen Ginsberg

Irwin Allen Ginsberg (June 3, 1926 – April 5, 1997) was an American poet and writer.

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Alter-globalization

Alter-globalization (also known as alter-globo, alternative globalization or alter-mundialization—from the French alter-mondialisation) is a social movement whose proponents support global cooperation and interaction, but oppose what they describe as the negative effects of economic globalization, considering it to often work to the detriment of, or to not adequately promote, human values such as environmental and climate protection, economic justice, labor protection, protection of indigenous cultures, peace and civil liberties.

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The Alternative Media Project was a non-profit organization that promoted anarchist media.

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Alternative Press Review

Alternative Press Review (byline: "Your guide beyond the mainstream") was a libertarian American magazine established in 1993 as a sister periodical to Anarchy: A Journal of Desire Armed.

See Anarchism in the United States and Alternative Press Review

American Civil War

The American Civil War (April 12, 1861 – May 26, 1865; also known by other names) was a civil war in the United States between the Union ("the North") and the Confederacy ("the South"), which was formed in 1861 by states that had seceded from the Union.

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American Federation of Labor

The American Federation of Labor (A.F. of L.) was a national federation of labor unions in the United States that continues today as the AFL–CIO.

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American Left

The American Left can refer to multiple concepts. Anarchism in the United States and American Left are left-wing politics in the United States and political movements in the United States.

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Ammon Hennacy

Ammon Ashford Hennacy (July 24, 1893 – January 14, 1970) was an American Christian pacifist, anarchist, Wobbly, social activist, and member of the Catholic Worker Movement.

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Anarcha-feminism

Anarcha-feminism, also known as anarchist feminism or anarcho-feminism, is a system of analysis which combines the principles and power analysis of anarchist theory with feminism.

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Anarchism

Anarchism is a political philosophy and movement that is against all forms of authority and seeks to abolish the institutions it claims maintain unnecessary coercion and hierarchy, typically including the state and capitalism.

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Anarchism (Eltzbacher book)

Anarchism is book-length study of anarchism written by Paul Eltzbacher.

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Major anarchist thinkers (except Proudhon), past and present, have generally supported women's equality.

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Anarchism in Italy

Italian anarchism as a movement began primarily from the influence of Mikhail Bakunin, Giuseppe Fanelli, Carlo Cafiero, and Errico Malatesta. Anarchism in the United States and anarchism in Italy are anarchism by country.

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Anarchism in Spain

Anarchism in Spain has historically gained some support and influence, especially before Francisco Franco's victory in the Spanish Civil War of 1936–1939, when it played an active political role and is considered the end of the golden age of classical anarchism. Anarchism in the United States and anarchism in Spain are anarchism by country.

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Anarchism in the United States

Anarchism in the United States began in the mid-19th century and started to grow in influence as it entered the American labor movements, growing an anarcho-communist current as well as gaining notoriety for violent propaganda of the deed and campaigning for diverse social reforms in the early 20th century. Anarchism in the United States and Anarchism in the United States are 1820s establishments in the United States, anarchism by country, left-wing politics in the United States and political movements in the United States.

See Anarchism in the United States and Anarchism in the United States

Anarchism without adjectives

Anarchism without adjectives is a pluralist tendency of anarchism that opposes sectarianism and advocates for cooperation between different anarchist schools of thought.

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Anarchist Black Cross

The Anarchist Black Cross (ABC), formerly the Anarchist Red Cross, is an anarchist support organization.

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Anarchist communism

Anarchist communism is a political ideology and anarchist school of thought that advocates communism.

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Anarchist Portraits

Anarchist Portraits is a 1988 history book by Paul Avrich about the lives and personalities of multiple prominent and inconspicuous anarchists.

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Anarchist Studies

Anarchist Studies is a biannual academic journal on anarchism.

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Anarcho-naturism

Anarcho-naturism, also referred to as anarchist naturism and naturist anarchism, appeared in the late 19th century as the union of anarchist and naturist philosophies.

See Anarchism in the United States and Anarcho-naturism

Anarcho-pacifism

Anarcho-pacifism, also referred to as anarchist pacifism and pacifist anarchism, is an anarchist school of thought that advocates for the use of peaceful, non-violent forms of resistance in the struggle for social change.

See Anarchism in the United States and Anarcho-pacifism

Anarcho-primitivism

Anarcho-primitivism, also known as anti-civilization anarchism, is an anarchist critique of civilization that advocates a return to non-civilized ways of life through deindustrialization, abolition of the division of labor or specialization, abandonment of large-scale organization and all technology other than prehistoric technology and the dissolution of agriculture.

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Anarcho-syndicalism

Anarcho-syndicalism is an anarchist organisational model that centres trade unions as a vehicle for class conflict.

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Anarcho-Syndicalist Review

Anarcho-Syndicalist Review (also known as ASR, formerly the Libertarian Labor Review) is an American anarchist magazine published multiple times per year that focuses on anarcho-syndicalist theory and practice.

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Anarchy (magazine)

Anarchy was an anarchist monthly magazine produced in London from March 1961 until December 1970.

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Andrea Salsedo

Andrea Salsedo (21 September 1881 – 3 May 1920) was an Italian anarchist whose death caused controversy as it was caused by a suspicious fall from the Justice Department's Bureau of Investigation (BOI) offices on 15 Park Row in New York City.

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Angela Heywood

Angela Fiducia Heywood (1840–1935) was a radical writer and activist, known as a free love advocate, suffragist, socialist, spiritualist, labor reformer, and abolitionist.

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Anti-authoritarianism is opposition to authoritarianism, which is defined as "a form of social organisation characterised by submission to authority", "favoring complete obedience or subjection to authority as opposed to individual freedom" and to authoritarian government.

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Anti-capitalism

Anti-capitalism is a political ideology and movement encompassing a variety of attitudes and ideas that oppose capitalism.

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Anti-clericalism

Anti-clericalism is opposition to religious authority, typically in social or political matters.

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Anti-globalization movement

The anti-globalization movement, or counter-globalization movement, is a social movement critical of economic globalization.

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Anti-racism

Anti-racism encompasses a range of ideas and political actions which are meant to counter racial prejudice, systemic racism, and the oppression of specific racial groups.

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Anti-war movement

An anti-war movement (also antiwar) is a social movement, usually in opposition to a particular nation's decision to start or carry on an armed conflict.

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Antifa (United States)

Antifa is a left-wing anti-fascist and anti-racist political movement in the United States. Anarchism in the United States and Antifa (United States) are left-wing politics in the United States and political movements in the United States.

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Apoliticism

Apoliticism is apathy or antipathy towards all political affiliations.

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Artisan

An artisan (from artisan, artigiano) is a skilled craft worker who makes or creates material objects partly or entirely by hand.

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Ashcan School

The Ashcan School, also called the Ash Can School, was an artistic movement in the United States during the late 19th-early 20th century that produced works portraying scenes of daily life in New York, often in the city's poorer neighborhoods.

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Associated Press

The Associated Press (AP) is an American not-for-profit news agency headquartered in New York City.

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Atheism

Atheism, in the broadest sense, is an absence of belief in the existence of deities.

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Auberon Herbert

Auberon Edward William Molyneux Herbert (18 June 1838 – 5 November 1906) was a British writer, theorist, philosopher, and 19th century individualist.

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August Spies

August Vincent Theodore Spies (December 10, 1855November 11, 1887) was an American upholsterer, radical labor activist, and newspaper editor.

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Augustin Souchy

Augustin Souchy Bauer (28 August 1892 – 1 January 1984) was a German anarchist, antimilitarist, labor union official and journalist.

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Autonomedia is a nonprofit publisher based in Williamsburg, Brooklyn known for publishing works of criticism.

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Émile Armand

Émile Armand (March 26, 1872 – February 19, 1963), pseudonym of Ernest-Lucien Juin Armand, was an influential French individualist anarchist at the beginning of the 20th century and also a dedicated free love/polyamory, intentional community, and pacifist/antimilitarist writer, propagandist and activist.

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Bay View incident

The Bay View Incident occurred on September 9, 1917, when police clashed with Italian anarchists in the Bay View neighborhood of Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

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Beat Generation

The Beat Generation was a literary subculture movement started by a group of authors whose work explored and influenced American culture and politics in the post-World War II era.

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Benjamin Tucker

Benjamin Ricketson Tucker (April 17, 1854 – June 22, 1939) was an American individualist anarchistMartin, James J. (1953).

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Berkeley, California

Berkeley is a city on the eastern shore of San Francisco Bay in northern Alameda County, California, United States.

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Bill Haywood

William Dudley Haywood (February 4, 1869 – May 18, 1928), nicknamed "Big Bill", was an American labor organizer and founding member and leader of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) and a member of the executive committee of the Socialist Party of America.

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Bioregionalism

Bioregionalism is a philosophy that suggests that political, cultural, and economic systems are more sustainable and just if they are organized around naturally defined areas called bioregions, similar to ecoregions.

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Birth control

Birth control, also known as contraception, anticonception, and fertility control, is the use of methods or devices to prevent unintended pregnancy.

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Black bloc

A black bloc (sometimes black block) is a tactic used by protesters who wear black clothing, ski masks, scarves, sunglasses, motorcycle helmets with padding or other face-concealing and face-protecting items.

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Bohemianism

Bohemianism is a social and cultural movement that has, at its core, a way of life away from society's conventional norms and expectations.

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Bolsheviks

The Bolsheviks (italic,; from большинство,, 'majority'), led by Vladimir Lenin, were a far-left faction of the Marxist Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP) which split with the Mensheviks at the Second Party Congress in 1903.

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Boston

Boston, officially the City of Boston, is the capital and most populous city in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in the United States.

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Braintree, Massachusetts

Braintree, officially the Town of Braintree, is a municipality in Norfolk County, Massachusetts.

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Brentwood, New York

Brentwood is a hamlet in the Town of Islip in Suffolk County, on Long Island, in New York, United States.

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Broadsheet

A broadsheet is the largest newspaper format and is characterized by long vertical pages, typically of.

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C. Wright Mills

Charles Wright Mills (August 28, 1916 – March 20, 1962) was an American sociologist, and a professor of sociology at Columbia University from 1946 until his death in 1962.

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Cambridge, Massachusetts

Cambridge is a city in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States.

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Campaign for Peace and Democracy

The Campaign for Peace and Democracy (CPD) was a socialist, New York City-based organization that promoted "a new, progressive and non-militaristic U.S. foreign policy," in contrast to existing foreign policy, which CPD characterized as "based on domination, militarism, fear of popular struggles, enforcement of an inequitable and cruel global economy and persistent support for authoritarian regimes." The hallmark of CPD's work was its efforts to seek out and work with dissidents and social justice movements worldwide, and to forge alliances between them and progressive movements in the United States.

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Canonization

Canonization is the declaration of a deceased person as an officially recognized saint, specifically, the official act of a Christian communion declaring a person worthy of public veneration and entering their name in the canon catalogue of saints, or authorized list of that communion's recognized saints.

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Capitalism

Capitalism is an economic system based on the private ownership of the means of production and their operation for profit.

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Capitol Hill Occupied Protest

The Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone (CHAZ) or Capitol Hill Organized Protest (CHOP), originally Free Capitol Hill and occasionally the Capitol Hill Occupied Protest (CHOP), was a far-left occupation protest and self-declared autonomous zone in the Capitol Hill neighborhood of Seattle, Washington.

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Catholic Church

The Catholic Church, also known as the Roman Catholic Church, is the largest Christian church, with 1.28 to 1.39 billion baptized Catholics worldwide as of 2024.

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Catholic Worker Movement

The Catholic Worker Movement is a collection of autonomous communities founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin in the United States in 1933.

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Center for Strategic and International Studies

The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) is an American think tank based in Washington, D.C. From its founding in 1962 until 1987, it was an affiliate of Georgetown University, initially named the Center for Strategic and International Studies of Georgetown University.

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Charles Fourier

François Marie Charles Fourier (7 April 1772 – 10 October 1837) was a French philosopher, an influential early socialist thinker, and one of the founders of utopian socialism.

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Chicago

Chicago is the most populous city in the U.S. state of Illinois and in the Midwestern United States.

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Chicago Police Department

The Chicago Police Department (CPD) is the primary law enforcement agency of the city of Chicago, Illinois, United States, under the jurisdiction of the Chicago City Council.

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Chicago Tribune

The Chicago Tribune is an American daily newspaper based in Chicago, Illinois, owned by Tribune Publishing.

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Christian anarchism

Christian anarchism is a Christian movement in political theology that claims anarchism is inherent in Christianity and the Gospels.

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Christian pacifism

Christian pacifism is the theological and ethical position according to which pacifism and non-violence have both a scriptural and rational basis for Christians, and affirms that any form of violence is incompatible with the Christian faith.

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Cincinnati Time Store

The Cincinnati Time Store (1827–1830) was the first in a series of retail stores created by American individualist anarchist Josiah Warren to test his economic labor theory of value.

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Civil Disobedience (Thoreau)

Resistance to Civil Government, also called On the Duty of Civil Disobedience or Civil Disobedience for short, is an essay by American transcendentalist Henry David Thoreau that was first published in 1849.

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Clamor (magazine)

Clamor was a bi-monthly magazine published in Toledo, Ohio, and founded by Jen Angel and Jason Kucsma.

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Clandestine cell system

A clandestine cell system is a method for organizing a group of people, such as resistance fighters, spies, mercenaries, organized crime members, or terrorists, to make it harder for police, military or other hostile groups to catch them.

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Class consciousness

In Marxism, class consciousness is the set of beliefs that persons hold regarding their social class or economic rank in society, the structure of their class, and their class interests.

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Columbia University Press

Columbia University Press is a university press based in New York City, and affiliated with Columbia University.

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Columbia, Missouri

Columbia is a city in the U.S. state of Missouri.

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Common Ground Collective

The Common Ground Collective is a decentralized network of non-profit organizations offering support to the residents of New Orleans.

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Communitas (book)

Communitas: Means of Livelihood and Ways of Life is a 1947 book on community and city planning by Percival and Paul Goodman.

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Community organizing is a process where people who live in proximity to each other or share some common problem come together into an organization that acts in their shared self-interest.

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Comstock Act of 1873

The Comstock Act of 1873 refers to a series of current provisions in Federal law that generally criminalize the involvement of the United States Postal Service, its officers, or a common carrier in conveying obscene matter, crime-inciting matter, or certain abortion-related matter.

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Confederación Nacional del Trabajo

The (National Confederation of Labor; CNT) is a Spanish confederation of anarcho-syndicalist labor unions, which was long affiliated with the International Workers' Association (AIT).

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Confiscation

Confiscation (from the Latin confiscatio "to consign to the fiscus, i.e. transfer to the treasury") is a legal form of seizure by a government or other public authority.

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Conscription in the United States

In the United States, military conscription, commonly known as the draft, has been employed by the U.S. federal government in six conflicts: the American Revolutionary War, the American Civil War, World War I, World War II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War.

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Contemporary anarchism

Contemporary anarchism within the history of anarchism is the period of the anarchist movement continuing from the end of World War II and into the present.

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Cost the limit of price

"Cost the limit of price" was a maxim coined by Josiah Warren, indicating a (prescriptive) version of the labor theory of value.

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Counterculture

A counterculture is a culture whose values and norms of behavior differ substantially from those of mainstream society, sometimes diametrically opposed to mainstream cultural mores.

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Counterculture of the 1960s

The counterculture of the 1960s was an anti-establishment cultural phenomenon and political movement that developed in the Western world during the mid-20th century.

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Coup d'état

A coup d'état, or simply a coup, is typically an illegal and overt attempt by a military organization or other government elites to unseat an incumbent leadership.

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COVID-19 pandemic in the United States

On December 31, 2019, China announced the discovery of a cluster of pneumonia cases in Wuhan.

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CrimethInc.

CrimethInc., also known as CWC, which stands for either "CrimethInc.

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Cronaca Sovversiva

Cronaca Sovversiva (Subversive Chronicle) was an Italian-language, United States-based anarchist newspaper associated with Luigi Galleani from 1903 to 1920.

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Dallas

Dallas is a city in the U.S. state of Texas and the most populous city in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, the most populous metropolitan area in Texas and the fourth-most populous metropolitan area in the United States at 7.5 million people.

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Dave Van Ronk

David Kenneth Ritz Van Ronk (June 30, 1936 – February 10, 2002) was an American folk singer.

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David Edelstadt

David Edelstadt (Yiddish: דוד עדעלשטאַט; May 9, 1866, Kaluga, Russia – 17 October 1892, Denver, Colorado) was a Jewish, Russian-American anarchist poet in the Yiddish language.

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David Graeber

David Rolfe Graeber (February 12, 1961 – September 2, 2020) was an American anthropologist and anarchist activist.

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Death of Lazarus Averbuch

Lazarus “Jerome” Averbuch (1889–1908) was a 19-year-old Russian-born Jewish immigrant to Chicago who was shot and killed by Chicago Chief of Police George M. Shippy on March 2, 1908.

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Decentralization

Decentralization or decentralisation is the process by which the activities of an organization, particularly those regarding planning and decision-making, are distributed or delegated away from a central, authoritative location or group and given to smaller factions within it.

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Der Eigene

Der Eigene was one of the first gay journals in the world, published from 1896 to 1932 by Adolf Brand in Berlin.

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Di Yunge

Di Yunge was the first major literary movement of Yiddish poetry in America.

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Diggers

The Diggers were a group of religious and political dissidents in England, associated with agrarian socialism.

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Diggers (theater)

The Diggers were a radical community-action group of activists and street theatre actors operating from 1966 to 1968, based in the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood of San Francisco.

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Direct action

Direct action is a term for economic and political behavior in which participants use agency—for example economic or physical power—to achieve their goals.

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Dissent (American magazine)

Dissent is an American Left intellectual magazine founded in 1954.

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Dissident

A dissident is a person who actively challenges an established political or religious system, doctrine, belief, policy, or institution.

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Distributism

Distributism is an economic theory asserting that the world's productive assets should be widely owned rather than concentrated.

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District attorney

In the United States, a district attorney (DA), county attorney, county prosecutor, state's attorney, prosecuting attorney, commonwealth's attorney, state attorney or solicitor is the chief prosecutor or chief law enforcement officer representing a U.S. state in a local government area, typically a county or a group of counties.

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Dorothy Day

Dorothy Day (November 8, 1897 – November 29, 1980) was an American journalist, social activist and anarchist who, after a bohemian youth, became a Catholic without abandoning her social activism.

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Dorothy Parker

Dorothy Parker (née Rothschild; August 22, 1893 – June 7, 1967) was an American poet and writer of fiction, plays and screenplays based in New York; she was known for her caustic wisecracks, and eye for 20th-century urban foibles.

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DUMBA

DUMBA was a collective living space and anarchist, queer, all-ages community center and venue in Brooklyn, New York.

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Dwight Macdonald

Dwight Macdonald (March 24, 1906 – December 19, 1982) was an American writer, critic, philosopher, and activist.

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Dyer Lum

Dyer Daniel Lum (February 15, 1839 – April 6, 1893) was an American labor activist, economist and political journalist.

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E. F. Schumacher

Ernst Friedrich Schumacher (16 August 1911 – 4 September 1977) was a British statistician and economist who is best known for his proposals for human-scale, decentralised and appropriate technologies.

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Ecology

Ecology is the natural science of the relationships among living organisms, including humans, and their physical environment.

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Economist

An economist is a professional and practitioner in the social science discipline of economics.

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Edna St. Vincent Millay

Edna St.

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Edward S. Herman

Edward Samuel Herman (April 7, 1925 – November 11, 2017) was an American economist, media scholar and social critic.

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Egoist anarchism

Egoist anarchism or anarcho-egoism, often shortened as simply egoism, is a school of anarchist thought that originated in the philosophy of Max Stirner, a 19th-century philosopher whose "name appears with familiar regularity in historically orientated surveys of anarchist thought as one of the earliest and best known exponents of individualist anarchism".

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Eight-hour day

The eight-hour day (also known as the 40-hour week movement or the short-time movement) was a social movement to regulate the length of a working day, preventing excesses and abuses of working time.

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Emma Goldman

Emma Goldman (June 27, 1869 – May 14, 1940) was a Lithuanian-born anarchist revolutionary, political activist, and writer.

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Encarta

Microsoft Encarta is a discontinued digital multimedia encyclopedia published by Microsoft from 1993 to 2009.

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Enrico Arrigoni

Enrico Arrigoni (pseudonym: Frank Brand) (February 20, 1894 Pozzuolo Martesana, Province of Milan – December 7, 1986 New York City) was an Italian American individualist anarchist, a lathe operator, house painter, bricklayer, dramatist and political activist influenced by the work of Max Stirner.

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Errico Malatesta

Errico Malatesta (4 December 1853 – 22 July 1932) was an Italian anarchist propagandist and revolutionary socialist.

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Eugene, Oregon

Eugene is a city in and the county seat of Lane County, Oregon, United States.

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Executive Office of the President of the United States

The Executive Office of the President of the United States (EOP) comprises the offices and agencies that support the work of the president at the center of the executive branch of the United States federal government.

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Ezra Heywood

Ezra Hervey Heywood (September 29, 1829 – May 22, 1893), known as Ezra Hervey Hoar before 1848, was an American individualist anarchist, slavery abolitionist, and advocate of equal rights for women.

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Federación Anarquista Ibérica

The Iberian Anarchist Federation (Federación Anarquista Ibérica, FAI) is a Spanish anarchist organization.

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Federation of Organized Trades and Labor Unions

The Federation of Organized Trades and Labor Unions of the United States and Canada (FOTLU) was a federation of labor unions created on November 15, 1881, at Turner Hall in Pittsburgh.

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Felipe Pigna

Felipe Pigna (born 29 May 1959) is an Argentine historian and writer.

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Ferrer Center and Colony

The Ferrer Center and Stelton Colony were an anarchist social center and colony, respectively, organized to honor the memory of anarchist pedagogue Francisco Ferrer and to build a school based on his model, Escuela Moderna, in the United States.

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Ferrer movement

The Ferrer school was an early 20th century libertarian school inspired by the anarchist pedagogy of Francisco Ferrer.

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Fifth Estate (periodical)

Fifth Estate is a U.S. periodical, based in Detroit, Michigan, begun in 1965.

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Fine print

Fine print, small print, or mouseprint is less noticeable print smaller than the more obvious larger print it accompanies that advertises or otherwise describes or partially describes a commercial product or service.

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First Convention of the Industrial Workers of the World

When Bill Haywood used a board to gavel to order the first convention of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), he announced, "this is the Continental Congress of the working class.

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First Red Scare

The first Red Scare was a period during the early 20th-century history of the United States marked by a widespread fear of far-left movements, including Bolshevism and anarchism, due to real and imagined events; real events included the Russian 1917 October Revolution, German Revolution of 1918–1919, and anarchist bombings in the U.S.

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First-wave feminism

First-wave feminism was a period of feminist activity and thought that occurred during the 19th and early 20th century throughout the Western world.

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Florence Finch Kelly

Florence Finch Kelly (March 27, 1858 – December 17, 1939) was an American feminist, suffragist, journalist and author of novels and short stories.

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Foreign policy of the United States

The officially stated goals of the foreign policy of the United States of America, including all the bureaus and offices in the United States Department of State, as mentioned in the Foreign Policy Agenda of the Department of State, are "to build and sustain a more democratic, secure, and prosperous world for the benefit of the American people and the international community".

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Fourierism

Fourierism is the systematic set of economic, political, and social beliefs first espoused by French intellectual Charles Fourier (1772–1837).

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Fourth Estate

The term Fourth Estate or fourth power refers to the press and news media both in explicit capacity of advocacy and implicit ability to frame political issues.

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Fourth World

The Fourth World is an extension of the three-world model, used variably to refer to.

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Frameup

In the United States criminal law, a frame-up (frameup) or setup is the act of falsely implicating (framing) someone in a crime by providing fabricated evidence or testimony.

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Francisco Ferrer

Francesc Ferrer i Guàrdia (January 14, 1859 – October 13, 1909), widely known as Francisco Ferrer, was a Spanish radical freethinker, anarchist, and educationist behind a network of secular, private, libertarian schools in and around Barcelona.

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Fraye Arbeter Shtime

Freie Arbeiter Stimme (Daytshmerish spelling of פֿרייע אַרבעטער שטימע romanized: Fraye arbeṭer shṭime, lit. 'Free Voice of Labor' also spelled with an extra mem פֿרייע אַרבעטער שטיממע) was a Yiddish-language anarchist newspaper published from New York City's Lower East Side between 1890 and 1977.

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Fredy Perlman

Fredy Perlman (1934–1985) was an American author, publisher, and activist.

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Free banking

Free banking is a monetary arrangement where banks are free to issue their own paper currency (banknotes) while also being subject to no special regulations beyond those applicable to most enterprises.

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Free love

Free love is a social movement that accepts all forms of love.

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Free Society

Free Society (1895–1897 as The Firebrand; 1897–1904 as Free Society) was a major anarchist newspaper in the United States at the end of the nineteenth and beginning of the twentieth centuries.

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Freedom of speech

Freedom of speech is a principle that supports the freedom of an individual or a community to articulate their opinions and ideas without fear of retaliation, censorship, or legal sanction.

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Freethought

Freethought (sometimes spelled free thought) is an unorthodox attitude or belief.

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Freiheit (1879)

Freiheit (German for Freedom) was a long-running anarchist journal established by Johann Most in 1879.

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Friedrich Nietzsche

Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche (15 October 1844 – 25 August 1900) was a German classical scholar, philosopher, and critic of culture, who became one of the most influential of all modern thinkers.

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Future Primitive and Other Essays

Future Primitive and Other Essays is a collection of essays by anarcho-primitivist philosopher John Zerzan published by Autonomedia in 1994.

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G8

The Group of Eight (G8) was an inter-governmental political forum from 1997 until 2014.

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Gail Dolgin

Gail Dolgin (April 4, 1945 – October 7, 2010) was an American filmmaker.

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Gary Snyder

Gary Snyder (born May 8, 1930) is an American poet, essayist, lecturer, and environmental activist.

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Gay Liberation Front

Gay Liberation Front (GLF) was the name of several gay liberation groups, the first of which was formed in New York City in 1969, immediately after the Stonewall riots.

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Gender role

A gender role, or sex role, is a set of socially accepted behaviors and attitudes deemed appropriate or desirable for individuals based on their sex.

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General strike

A general strike is a strike action in which participants cease all economic activity, such as working, to strengthen the bargaining position of a trade union or achieve a common social or political goal.

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George Bellows

George Wesley Bellows (August 12 or August 19, 1882 – January 8, 1925) was an American realist painter, known for his bold depictions of urban life in New York City.

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George Bernard Shaw

George Bernard Shaw (26 July 1856 – 2 November 1950), known at his insistence as Bernard Shaw, was an Irish playwright, critic, polemicist and political activist.

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George Jackson Brigade

The George Jackson Brigade was a revolutionary group founded in the mid-1970s, based in Seattle, Washington, and named after George Jackson, a dissident prisoner and Black Panther member shot and killed during an alleged escape attempt at San Quentin Prison in 1971.

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George Woodcock

George Woodcock (May 8, 1912 – January 28, 1995) was a Canadian writer of political biography and history, an anarchist thinker, a philosopher, an essayist and literary critic.

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Georgism

Georgism, also called in modern times Geoism, and known historically as the single tax movement, is an economic ideology holding that people should own the value that they produce themselves, while the economic rent derived from land—including from all natural resources, the commons, and urban locations—should belong equally to all members of society.

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Gerrard Winstanley

Gerrard Winstanley (baptised 19 October 1609 – 10 September 1676) was an English Protestant religious reformer, political philosopher, and activist during the period of the Commonwealth of England.

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Gestalt therapy

Gestalt therapy is a form of psychotherapy that emphasizes personal responsibility and focuses on the individual's experience in the present moment, the therapist–client relationship, the environmental and social contexts of a person's life, and the self-regulating adjustments people make as a result of their overall situation.

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Giuseppe Ciancabilla

According to historian Paul Avrich, Ciancabilla was one of the most impressive (now one of the least well known) of the anarchist speakers and writers.

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Give-away shop

Give-away shops, freeshops, free stores or swap shops are stores where all goods are free.

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Globalization

Globalization, or globalisation (Commonwealth English; see spelling differences), is the process of interaction and integration among people, companies, and governments worldwide.

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Glossary of anarchism

The following is a list of terms specific to anarchists.

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Green anarchism

Green anarchism, also known as ecological anarchism or eco-anarchism, is an anarchist school of thought that focuses on ecology and environmental issues.

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Green politics

Green politics, or ecopolitics, is a political ideology that aims to foster an ecologically sustainable society often, but not always, rooted in environmentalism, nonviolence, social justice and grassroots democracy.

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Groucho Marx

Julius Henry "Groucho" Marx (October 2, 1890 – August 19, 1977) was an American comedian, actor, writer, and singer who performed in films and vaudeville on television, radio, and the stage.

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Growing Up Absurd

Growing Up Absurd is a 1960 book by Paul Goodman on the relationship between American juvenile delinquency and societal opportunities to fulfill natural needs.

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Guntersville, Alabama

Guntersville (previously known as Gunter's Ferry and later Gunter's Landing) is a city and the county seat of Marshall County, Alabama, United States.

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H. G. Wells

Herbert George Wells (21 September 1866 – 13 August 1946) was an English writer.

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Hardcore punk

Hardcore punk (commonly abbreviated to hardcore or hXc) is a punk rock subgenre and subculture that originated in the late 1970s.

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Harlem

Harlem is a neighborhood in Upper Manhattan in New York City.

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Hartford Courant

The Hartford Courant is the largest daily newspaper in the U.S. state of Connecticut, and is advertised as the oldest continuously published newspaper in the United States.

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Haymarket affair

The Haymarket affair, also known as the Haymarket massacre, the Haymarket riot, the Haymarket Square riot, or the Haymarket Incident, was the aftermath of a bombing that took place at a labor demonstration on May 4, 1886, at Haymarket Square in Chicago, Illinois, United States.

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Henrik Ibsen

Henrik Johan Ibsen (20 March 1828 – 23 May 1906) was a Norwegian playwright and theatre director.

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Henry Appleton (anarchist)

Henry Appleton was a 19th-century American individualist anarchist.

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Henry Clay Frick

Henry Clay Frick (December 19, 1849 – December 2, 1919) was an American industrialist, financier, and art patron.

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Henry David Thoreau

Henry David Thoreau (July 12, 1817May 6, 1862) was an American naturalist, essayist, poet, and philosopher.

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Herbert Spencer

Herbert Spencer (27 April 1820 – 8 December 1903) was an English polymath active as a philosopher, psychologist, biologist, sociologist, and anthropologist.

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Hippie

A hippie, also spelled hippy, especially in British English, is someone associated with the counterculture of the 1960s, originally a youth movement that began in the United States during or around 1964 and spread to different countries around the world.

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History of anarchism

According to different scholars, the history of anarchism either goes back to ancient and prehistoric ideologies and social structures, or begins in the 19th century as a formal movement.

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The history of the socialist movement in the United States spans a variety of tendencies, including anarchists, communists, democratic socialists, social democrats, Marxists, Marxist–Leninists, Trotskyists and utopian socialists. Anarchism in the United States and history of the socialist movement in the United States are left-wing politics in the United States and political movements in the United States.

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Homestead strike

The Homestead strike, also known as the Homestead steel strike, Homestead massacre, or Battle of Homestead, was an industrial lockout and strike that began on July 1, 1892, culminating in a battle in which strikers defeated private security agents on July 6, 1892.

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Homosexuality

Homosexuality is sexual attraction, romantic attraction, or sexual behavior between members of the same sex or gender.

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Humanitarianism

Humanitarianism is an ideology centered on the value of human life, whereby humans practice benevolent treatment and provide assistance to other humans to reduce suffering and improve the conditions of humanity for moral, altruistic, and emotional reasons.

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Hurricane Katrina

Hurricane Katrina was a devastating and deadly Category 5 Atlantic hurricane that caused 1,392 fatalities and damages estimated at $186.3 billion (2022 USD) in late August 2005, particularly in the city of New Orleans and its surrounding area.

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Hutchins Hapgood

Hutchins Harry Hapgood (1869–1944) was an American journalist, author, and anarchist.

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Illegalism

Illegalism is a tendency of anarchism that developed primarily in France, Italy, Belgium and Switzerland during the late 1890s and early 1900s as an outgrowth of individualist anarchism.

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IMDb

IMDb (an acronym for Internet Movie Database) is an online database of information related to films, television series, podcasts, home videos, video games, and streaming content online – including cast, production crew and personal biographies, plot summaries, trivia, ratings, and fan and critical reviews.

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Immigrants Against the State

Immigrants Against the State: Yiddish and Italian Anarchism in America is a book by historian Kenyon Zimmer that covers the anarchist ideology practiced by Italian immigrants and Eastern European Jewish immigrants in New York City, San Francisco, and Paterson, New Jersey, at the turn of the 20th century.

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Immigration Act of 1903

The Immigration Act of 1903, also called the Anarchist Exclusion Act, was a law of the United States regulating immigration.

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Immigration Act of 1918

The United States Immigration Act of 1918 (ch. 186) was enacted on October 16, 1918.

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Individualist anarchism

Individualist anarchism is the branch of anarchism that emphasizes the individual and their will over external determinants such as groups, society, traditions, and ideological systems.

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Individualist anarchism in Europe

Individualist anarchism in Europe proceeded from the roots laid by William GodwinWoodcock, George.

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Individualist anarchism in the United States

Individualist anarchism in the United States was strongly influenced by Benjamin Tucker, Josiah Warren, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Lysander Spooner, Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, Max Stirner, Herbert Spencer and Henry David Thoreau. Anarchism in the United States and Individualist anarchism in the United States are political movements in the United States.

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Industrial Workers of the World

The Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), whose members are nicknamed "Wobblies", is an international labor union founded in Chicago in 1905.

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Institute for Anarchist Studies

The Institute for Anarchist Studies (IAS) is a non-profit organization founded by Chuck W. Morse in 1996, following the anarcho-communist school of thought, to assist anarchist writers and further develop theoretical aspects of the anarchist movement.

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The Institute for Social Ecology (ISE) is an educational institution in Plainfield, Vermont dedicated to the study of social ecology, "an interdisciplinary field drawing on philosophy, political and social theory, anthropology, history, economics, the natural sciences, and feminism." Founded in 1974, ISE offered some of the first courses in the country on urbanism and ecology, radical technology, ecology and feminism, activist art and community; it "won an international reputation" for its courses in social theory, eco-philosophy and alternative technologies.

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Insurrectionary anarchism

Insurrectionary anarchism is a revolutionary theory and tendency within the anarchist movement that emphasizes insurrection as a revolutionary practice.

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Intellectual property

Intellectual property (IP) is a category of property that includes intangible creations of the human intellect.

See Anarchism in the United States and Intellectual property

An intentional community is a voluntary residential community which is designed to have a high degree of social cohesion and teamwork.

See Anarchism in the United States and Intentional community

International Workers' Day

International Workers' Day, also known as Labour Day in some countries and often referred to as May Day, is a celebration of labourers and the working classes that is promoted by the international labour movement and occurs every year on 1 May, or the first Monday in May.

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International Working People's Association

The International Working People's Association (IWPA), sometimes known as the "Black International," and originally named the "International Revolutionary Socialists", was an international anarchist political organization established in 1881 at a convention held in London, England.

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International Workingmen's Association

The International Workingmen's Association (IWA), often called the First International (1864–1876), was an international organisation which aimed at uniting a variety of different left-wing socialist, social democratic, communist and anarchist groups and trade unions that were based on the working class and class struggle.

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Internet

The Internet (or internet) is the global system of interconnected computer networks that uses the Internet protocol suite (TCP/IP) to communicate between networks and devices.

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IWA–AIT

The International Workers' Association – Asociación Internacional de los Trabajadores (IWA–AIT) is an international federation of anarcho-syndicalist labor unions and initiatives.

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J. Edgar Hoover

John Edgar Hoover (January 1, 1895 – May 2, 1972) was an American law-enforcement administrator who served as the final Director of the Bureau of Investigation (BOI) and the first Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).

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J. William Lloyd

J.

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Jack London

John Griffith Chaney (January 12, 1876 – November 22, 1916), better known as Jack London, was an American novelist, journalist and activist.

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James J. Martin (historian)

James J. Martin (1916–2004) was an American historian and author known for espousing Holocaust denial in his works.

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James L. Walker

James L. Walker (June 1845 – April 2, 1904), sometimes known by the pen name Tak Kak, was an American individualist anarchist of the Egoist school, born in Manchester, United Kingdom.

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Janet Biehl

Janet Biehl (born September 4, 1953) is an American author, copyeditor, translator, and artist.

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Jo Labadie

Charles Joseph Antoine Labadie (April 18, 1850 – October 7, 1933) was an American labor organizer, anarchist, Greenbacker, libertarian socialist, social activist, printer, publisher, essayist, and poet.

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Joe Hill (activist)

Joe Hill (October 7, 1879 – November 19, 1915), born Joel Emmanuel Hägglund and also known as Joseph Hillström, was a Swedish-American labor activist, songwriter, and member of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW, familiarly called the "Wobblies").

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Joe Hill House

The Joe Hill House was a Catholic Worker Movement house of hospitality in Salt Lake City, Utah co-founded in 1961 by Ammon Hennacy and Mary Lathrop.

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Johann Most

Johann Joseph "Hans" Most (February 5, 1846 – March 17, 1906) was a German-American Social Democratic and then anarchist politician, newspaper editor, and orator.

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John Cage

John Milton Cage Jr. (September 5, 1912 – August 12, 1992) was an American composer and music theorist.

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John Dos Passos

John Roderigo Dos Passos (January 14, 1896 – September 28, 1970) was an American novelist, most notable for his ''U.S.A.'' trilogy.

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John Henry Mackay

John Henry Mackay (February 6, 1864 – May 16, 1933) was a Scottish-German egoist anarchist, thinker and writer.

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John Moore (anarchist)

John Moore (25 December 1957 – 27 October 2002) was a British anarchist author, teacher, and organiser.

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John Papworth

John Papworth (12 December 1921 – 4 July 2020) was an English clergyman, writer and activist against big public and private organizations and for small communities and enterprises.

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John Zerzan

John Edward Zerzan (born August 10, 1943) is an American anarchist and primitivist author.

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Joseph Pulitzer

Joseph Pulitzer (born Pulitzer József,; April 10, 1847 – October 29, 1911) was a Hungarian-American politician and newspaper publisher of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and the New York World.

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Joshua K. Ingalls

Joshua King Ingalls (July 16, 1816 – Mar 3, 1899) was an American inventor, Christian minister, writer and land reformer who influenced contemporary individualist anarchists, despite never self-identifying as one.

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Josiah Warren

Josiah Warren (June 26, 1798 – April 14, 1874) was an American utopian socialist, American individualist anarchist, individualist philosopher, polymath, social reformer, inventor, musician, printer and author.

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Julian Beck

Julian Beck (May 31, 1925 – September 14, 1985) was an American actor, stage director, poet, and painter.

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Julius Caesar

Gaius Julius Caesar (12 July 100 BC – 15 March 44 BC) was a Roman general and statesman.

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Jurist

A jurist is a person with expert knowledge of law; someone who analyzes and comments on law.

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Kafka's Prayer

Kafka's Prayer is a 1947 book-length analysis of the novelist Franz Kafka and his works by Paul Goodman.

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Karl Marx

Karl Marx (5 May 1818 – 14 March 1883) was a German-born philosopher, political theorist, economist, historian, sociologist, journalist, and revolutionary socialist.

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Katie Sierra free speech case

In October 2001, Katie Sierra was suspended from Sissonville High School, near Charleston, West Virginia, for activism in opposition to the War in Afghanistan.

See Anarchism in the United States and Katie Sierra free speech case

Kaunas

Kaunas (previously known in English as Kovno, also see other names) is the second-largest city in Lithuania after Vilnius, the fourth largest city in the Baltic States and an important centre of Lithuanian economic, academic, and cultural life.

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Kenneth Rexroth

Kenneth Charles Marion Rexroth (December 22, 1905 – June 6, 1982) was an American poet, translator, and critical essayist.

See Anarchism in the United States and Kenneth Rexroth

Killing of Manuel Esteban Paez Terán

Manuel Esteban Paez Terán, also known as Tortuguita, was a Venezuelan environmental activist and eco-anarchist who was shot and killed by Georgia State Patrol Troopers, after a Georgia State Patrol Trooper was wounded during a raid of the Stop Cop City encampment on January 18, 2023.

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Kirkpatrick Sale

Kirkpatrick Sale (born June 27, 1937) is an American author who has written prolifically about political decentralism, environmentalism, luddism and technology.

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Knights of Labor

The Knights of Labor (K of L), officially the Noble and Holy Order of the Knights of Labor, was an American labor federation that was active in the late 19th century, especially the 1880s.

See Anarchism in the United States and Knights of Labor

Kuwasi Balagoon

Kuwasi Balagoon (December 22, 1946 – December 13, 1986), born Donald Weems, was an American political activist, anarchist and member of the Black Panther Party and Black Liberation Army.

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KWVA

KWVA (88.1 FM) is a college radio station broadcasting from the Erb Memorial Union on the University of Oregon campus in Eugene, Oregon, United States.

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L'Adunata dei refrattari

L'Adunata dei refrattari (en: Call of the refractaires (unmanageable ones)) was an Italian American anarchist publication published between 1922 and 1971 in New York City.

See Anarchism in the United States and L'Adunata dei refrattari

Labor history of the United States

The nature and power of organized labor in the United States is the outcome of historical tensions among counter-acting forces involving workplace rights, wages, working hours, political expression, labor laws, and other working conditions.

See Anarchism in the United States and Labor history of the United States

Labour movement

The labour movement is the collective organisation of working people to further their shared political and economic interests.

See Anarchism in the United States and Labour movement

Lakewood Township, New Jersey

Lakewood Township is the most populous township in Ocean County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey.

See Anarchism in the United States and Lakewood Township, New Jersey

Left-wing politics

Left-wing politics describes the range of political ideologies that support and seek to achieve social equality and egalitarianism, often in opposition to social hierarchy as a whole or certain social hierarchies.

See Anarchism in the United States and Left-wing politics

Leo Tolstoy

Count Lev Nikolayevich TolstoyTolstoy pronounced his first name as, which corresponds to the romanization Lyov.

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Leon Czolgosz

Leon F. Czolgosz (May 5, 1873 – October 29, 1901) was an American laborer and anarchist who assassinated President of the United States William McKinley on September 6, 1901, in Buffalo, New York.

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Leonard Abbott

Leonard Abbott (May 20, 1878 – 1953) was an anarchist and socialist best known for co-founding the Stelton Colony and related Ferrer Association in the 1910s.

See Anarchism in the United States and Leonard Abbott

Leopold Kohr

Leopold Kohr (5 October 1909 – 26 February 1994) was an economist, jurist and political scientist known both for his opposition to the "cult of bigness" in social organization and as one of those who inspired the Small Is Beautiful movement.

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Lev Chernyi

Pavel Dmitrievich Turchaninov (p; 1878–1921), commonly known by his pseudonym Lev Chernyi (a) was a Russian individualist anarchist.

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Leviathan (Hobbes book)

Leviathan or The Matter, Forme and Power of a Commonwealth Ecclesiasticall and Civil, commonly referred to as Leviathan, is a book written by Thomas Hobbes (1588–1679) and published in 1651 (revised Latin edition 1668).

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Libertarian Book Club and League

The Libertarian Book Club and Libertarian League were two postwar anarchist groups in New York City associated with Sam and Esther Dolgoff.

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Libertarian socialism is an anti-authoritarian and anti-capitalist political current that emphasises self-governance and workers' self-management.

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Libertarianism

Libertarianism (from libertaire, itself from the lit) is a political philosophy that upholds liberty as a core value.

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Liberty (1881–1908 periodical)

Liberty was a 19th-century anarchist market socialist and libertarian socialist periodical published in the United States by Benjamin Tucker from August 1881 to April 1908.

See Anarchism in the United States and Liberty (1881–1908 periodical)

List of anarchist periodicals

The following is a chronological list of noteworthy anarchist periodicals that are still being published.

See Anarchism in the United States and List of anarchist periodicals

Living My Life

Living My Life is the autobiography of Lithuanian-born anarchist Emma Goldman, who became internationally renowned as an activist based in the United States.

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Lois Waisbrooker

Lois Waisbrooker (21 February 1826 – 3 October 1909) was an American feminist author, editor, publisher, and campaigner of the later nineteenth and the early twentieth centuries.

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Lorenzo Kom'boa Ervin

Lorenzo Kom'boa Ervin (born March 30, 1947) is an American writer, activist, and black anarchist.

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Lower East Side

The Lower East Side, sometimes abbreviated as LES, is a historic neighborhood in the southeastern part of Manhattan in New York City.

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Lucifer

The most common meaning for Lucifer in English is as a name for the Devil in Christian theology.

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Lucy Parsons

Lucy E. Parsons (– 1942) was an American social anarchist and later anarcho-communist.

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Lucy Parsons Center

The Lucy Parsons Center, located in Jamaica Plain, Boston, Massachusetts, is a radical, nonprofit independent bookstore and self-managed social center.

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Luigi Galleani

Luigi Galleani (12 August 1861 – 4 November 1931) was an Italian insurrectionary anarchist best known for his advocacy of "propaganda of the deed", a strategy of political assassinations and violent attacks.

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Luisa Capetillo

Luisa Capetillo (October 28, 1879 – April 10, 1922) was one of Puerto Rico's most famous labor leaders.

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Lysander Spooner

Lysander Spooner (January 19, 1808 — May 14, 1887) was an American abolitionist, entrepreneur, lawyer, essayist, natural rights legal theorist, pamphletist, political philosopher, Unitarian and writer often associated with the Boston anarchist tradition.

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Madison, Wisconsin

Madison is the capital city of the U.S. state of Wisconsin and the seat of Dane County.

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Magazine

A magazine is a periodical publication, generally published on a regular schedule (often weekly or monthly), containing a variety of content.

See Anarchism in the United States and Magazine

Mahatma Gandhi

Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (ISO: Mōhanadāsa Karamacaṁda Gāṁdhī; 2 October 186930 January 1948) was an Indian lawyer, anti-colonial nationalist and political ethicist who employed nonviolent resistance to lead the successful campaign for India's independence from British rule.

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Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media is a 1988 book by Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky.

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Marcus Junius Brutus

Marcus Junius Brutus (85 BC – 23 October 42 BC) was a Roman politician, orator, and the most famous of the assassins of Julius Caesar.

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Margaret Sanger

Margaret Higgins Sanger (born Margaret Louise Higgins; September 14, 1879September 6, 1966), also known as Margaret Sanger Slee, was an American birth control activist, sex educator, writer, and nurse.

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Mario Buda

Mario Buda (1883–1963) was an Italian anarchist who was active among the militant American Galleanists in the late 1910s and best known for being the likely perpetrator of the 1920 Wall Street bombing, which killed 40 people and injured hundreds.

See Anarchism in the United States and Mario Buda

Market socialism is a type of economic system involving social ownership of the means of production within the framework of a market economy.

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Martin Buber

Martin Buber (מרטין בובר; Martin Buber,; מארטין בובער; February 8, 1878 – June 13, 1965) was an Austrian-Jewish and Israeli philosopher best known for his philosophy of dialogue, a form of existentialism centered on the distinction between the I–Thou relationship and the I–It relationship.

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Martin Luther King Jr.

Martin Luther King Jr. (born Michael King Jr.; January 15, 1929 – April 4, 1968) was an American Baptist minister, activist, and political philosopher who was one of the most prominent leaders in the civil rights movement from 1955 until his assassination in 1968.

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Marx Edgeworth Lazarus

Marx Edgeworth Lazarus (February 6, 18221896) was an American individualist anarchist, Fourierist, and free-thinker.

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Marxism

Marxism is a political philosophy and method of socioeconomic analysis.

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Marxists Internet Archive

Marxists Internet Archive (also known as MIA or Marxists.org) is a non-profit online encyclopedia that hosts a multilingual library (created in 1990) of the works of communist, anarchist, and socialist writers, such as Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, Vladimir Lenin, Leon Trotsky, Joseph Stalin, Mao Zedong, Rosa Luxemburg, Mikhail Bakunin, Peter Kropotkin and Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, as well as that of writers of related ideologies, and even unrelated ones (for instance, Sun Tzu).

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In American usage, a publication's masthead is a printed list, published in a fixed position in each edition, of its owners, departments, officers, contributors and address details, which in British English usage is known as imprint.

See Anarchism in the United States and Masthead (American publishing)

Max Nettlau

Max Heinrich Hermann Reinhardt Nettlau (1865–1944) was a German anarchist and historian.

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Max Stirner

Johann Kaspar Schmidt (25 October 1806 – 26 June 1856), known professionally as Max Stirner, was a German post-Hegelian philosopher, dealing mainly with the Hegelian notion of social alienation and self-consciousness.

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May Day

May Day is a European festival of ancient origins marking the beginning of summer, usually celebrated on 1 May, around halfway between the Northern Hemisphere's Spring equinox and June solstice.

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Media studies is a discipline and field of study that deals with the content, history, and effects of various media; in particular, the mass media.

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Messianism

Messianism is the belief in the advent of a messiah who acts as the savior of a group of people.

See Anarchism in the United States and Messianism

Mexican–American War

The Mexican–American War, also known in the United States as the Mexican War, and in Mexico as the United States intervention in Mexico, was an invasion of Mexico by the United States Army from 1846 to 1848.

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Michael Dukakis

Michael Stanley Dukakis (born November 3, 1933) is an American retired lawyer and politician who served as governor of Massachusetts from 1975 to 1979 and from 1983 to 1991.

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Militarism

Militarism is the belief or the desire of a government or a people that a state should maintain a strong military capability and to use it aggressively to expand national interests and/or values.

See Anarchism in the United States and Militarism

Mises Institute

The Ludwig von Mises Institute for Austrian Economics, or Mises Institute, is a nonprofit think tank headquartered in Auburn, Alabama, that is a center for Austrian economics, radical right-wing libertarian thought and the paleolibertarian and anarcho-capitalist movements in the United States.

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Modern Times was a Utopian community existing from 1851 to 1864 in what is now Brentwood, New York, United States.

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Montessori education

The Montessori method of education is a type of educational method that involves children's natural interests and activities rather than formal teaching methods.

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Moses Harman

Moses Harman (October 12, 1830January 30, 1910) was an American schoolteacher and publisher notable for his staunch support for women's rights.

See Anarchism in the United States and Moses Harman

Most–Grottkau debate

"Anarchism or Communism?", better known as the Most–Grottkau debate, was a nationally advertised, public debate between America's foremost revolutionary anarchist Johann Most and Paul Grottkau in Chicago on May 24, 1884.

See Anarchism in the United States and Most–Grottkau debate

Mother Earth (magazine)

Mother Earth was an American anarchist journal that described itself as "A Monthly Magazine Devoted to Social Science and Literature".

See Anarchism in the United States and Mother Earth (magazine)

Movement for a New Society

The Movement for a New Society (MNS) was a U.S.-based network of social activist collectives, committed to the principles of nonviolence, who played a key role in social movements of the 1970s and 1980s.

See Anarchism in the United States and Movement for a New Society

Murray Bookchin

Murray Bookchin (January 14, 1921 – July 30, 2006) was an American social theorist, author, orator, historian, and political philosopher. Influenced by G. W. F. Hegel, Karl Marx, and Peter Kropotkin, he was a pioneer in the environmental movement.

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Murray Bookchin bibliography

This is a list of works by Murray Bookchin (1921–2006).

See Anarchism in the United States and Murray Bookchin bibliography

Mutual aid

Mutual aid is an organizational model where voluntary, collaborative exchanges of resources and services for common benefit take place amongst community members to overcome social, economic, and political barriers to meeting common needs.

See Anarchism in the United States and Mutual aid

Mutualism (economic theory)

Mutualism is an anarchist school of thought and anti-capitalist market socialist economic theory that advocates for workers' control of the means of production, a market economy made up of individual artisans and workers' cooperatives, and occupation and use property rights.

See Anarchism in the United States and Mutualism (economic theory)

My Disillusionment in Russia

My Disillusionment in Russia is a book by Emma Goldman, published in 1923 by Doubleday, Page & Co.

See Anarchism in the United States and My Disillusionment in Russia

Nationalist faction (Spanish Civil War)

The Nationalist faction (Bando nacional) or Rebel faction (Bando sublevado) was a major faction in the Spanish Civil War of 1936 to 1939.

See Anarchism in the United States and Nationalist faction (Spanish Civil War)

Some philosophers distinguish two types of rights, natural rights and legal rights.

See Anarchism in the United States and Natural rights and legal rights

Nellie Dick

Nellie Dick (born Naomi Ploschansky; 15 May 1893 – 31 October 1995) was an anarchist educator and for 40 years was at the forefront of the Modern Schools movement.

See Anarchism in the United States and Nellie Dick

New Harmony, Indiana

New Harmony is a historic town on the Wabash River in Harmony Township, Posey County, Indiana.

See Anarchism in the United States and New Harmony, Indiana

New Left

The New Left was a broad political movement that emerged from the counterculture of the 1960s and continued through the 1970s. Anarchism in the United States and New Left are political movements in the United States.

See Anarchism in the United States and New Left

The term new social movements (NSMs) is a theory of social movements that attempts to explain the plethora of new movements that have come up in various western societies roughly since the mid-1960s (i.e. in a post-industrial economy) which are claimed to depart significantly from the conventional social movement paradigm.

See Anarchism in the United States and New social movements

New York City

New York, often called New York City (to distinguish it from New York State) or NYC, is the most populous city in the United States.

See Anarchism in the United States and New York City

The New York Social Revolutionary Club was an anarchist group founded in 1880.

See Anarchism in the United States and New York Social Revolutionary Club

New York World

The New York World was a newspaper published in New York City from 1860 to 1931.

See Anarchism in the United States and New York World

The news media or news industry are forms of mass media that focus on delivering news to the general public.

See Anarchism in the United States and News media

Noam Chomsky

Avram Noam Chomsky (born December 7, 1928) is an American professor and public intellectual known for his work in linguistics, political activism, and social criticism.

See Anarchism in the United States and Noam Chomsky

Nonviolent resistance

Nonviolent resistance, or nonviolent action, sometimes called civil resistance, is the practice of achieving goals such as social change through symbolic protests, civil disobedience, economic or political noncooperation, satyagraha, constructive program, or other methods, while refraining from violence and the threat of violence.

See Anarchism in the United States and Nonviolent resistance

Norman Mailer

Nachem Malech Mailer (January 31, 1923 – November 10, 2007), known by his pen name Norman Kingsley Mailer, was an American novelist, journalist, playwright, and filmmaker.

See Anarchism in the United States and Norman Mailer

Occupy movement

The Occupy movement was an international populist socio-political movement that expressed opposition to social and economic inequality and to the perceived lack of real democracy around the world.

See Anarchism in the United States and Occupy movement

Occupy Wall Street

Occupy Wall Street (OWS) was a left-wing populist movement against economic inequality, corporate greed, big finance, and the influence of money in politics that began in Zuccotti Park, located in New York City's Financial District, and lasted for fifty-nine days—from September 17 to November 15, 2011.

See Anarchism in the United States and Occupy Wall Street

Oxford University Press

Oxford University Press (OUP) is the publishing house of the University of Oxford.

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Pacifism

Pacifism is the opposition or resistance to war, militarism (including conscription and mandatory military service) or violence.

See Anarchism in the United States and Pacifism

Palmer Raids

The Palmer Raids were a series of raids conducted in November 1919 and January 1920 by the United States Department of Justice under the administration of President Woodrow Wilson to capture and arrest suspected socialists, especially anarchists and communists, and deport them from the United States.

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Partisans of Freedom

Partisans of Freedom: A Study in American Anarchism is a 1976 history book about the history of anarchism in the United States by William O. Reichert.

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Paterson, New Jersey

Paterson is the largest city in and the county seat of Passaic County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey.

See Anarchism in the United States and Paterson, New Jersey

Paul Avrich

Paul Avrich (August 4, 1931 – February 16, 2006) was an American historian specialising in the 19th and early 20th-century anarchist movement in Russia and the United States.

See Anarchism in the United States and Paul Avrich

Paul Eltzbacher

Paul Eltzbacher (18 February 1868 – 25 October 1928) was a German law professor and author.

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Paul Goodman

Paul Goodman (September 9, 1911 – August 2, 1972) was an American writer and public intellectual best known for his 1960s works of social criticism.

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Pen name

A pen name is a pseudonym (or, in some cases, a variant form of a real name) adopted by an author and printed on the title page or by-line of their works in place of their real name.

See Anarchism in the United States and Pen name

Penal labour

Penal labour is a term for various kinds of forced labour that prisoners are required to perform, typically manual labour.

See Anarchism in the United States and Penal labour

Percival Goodman

Percival Goodman (January 13, 1904 – October 11, 1989) was an American urban theorist and architect who designed more than 50 synagogues between 1948 and 1983.

See Anarchism in the United States and Percival Goodman

Peter Lamborn Wilson

Peter Lamborn Wilson (October 20, 1945 – May 22, 2022) was an American anarchist author and poet, primarily known for his concept of Temporary Autonomous Zones, short-lived spaces which elude formal structures of control.

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Peter Maurin

Peter Maurin (May 9, 1877 – May 15, 1949) was a French Catholic social activist, theologian, and De La Salle Brother who founded the Catholic Worker Movement in 1933 with Dorothy Day.

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Phalansterium

Phalansterium is a genus of single-celled flagellated organisms comprising several species, which form colonies.

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Philosophical anarchism

Philosophical anarchism is an anarchist school of thought which focuses on intellectual criticism of authority, especially political power, and the legitimacy of governments.

See Anarchism in the United States and Philosophical anarchism

Pierre-Joseph Proudhon

Pierre-Joseph Proudhon (1809 – 19 January 1865) was a French socialist,Landauer, Carl; Landauer, Hilde Stein; Valkenier, Elizabeth Kridl (1979).

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Pigasus (politics)

Pigasus, also known as Pigasus the Immortal and Pigasus J. Pig, was a domestic pig that was nominated for President of the United States as a theatrical gesture by the Youth International Party on August 23, 1968, just before the opening of the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, Illinois.

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Pioneers of American Freedom

Pioneers of American Freedom: Origin of Liberal and Radical Thought in America is a book by Rudolf Rocker, a German anarcho-syndicalist, about the history of liberal, libertarian, and anarchist thought in the United States.

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Piscataway, New Jersey

Piscataway is a township in Middlesex County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey.

See Anarchism in the United States and Piscataway, New Jersey

Platformism

Platformism is an anarchist organizational theory that aims to create a tightly-coordinated anarchist federation.

See Anarchism in the United States and Platformism

Political prisoner

A political prisoner is someone imprisoned for their political activity.

See Anarchism in the United States and Political prisoner

Political science

Political science is the scientific study of politics.

See Anarchism in the United States and Political science

Politics (1940s magazine)

Politics, stylized as politics, was a journal founded and edited by Dwight Macdonald from 1944 to 1949.

See Anarchism in the United States and Politics (1940s magazine)

Portland Anarchist Road Care

Portland Anarchist Road Care (PARC) is a road maintenance organization formed in 2017 by anarchists in Portland, Oregon, United States, with the intention of repairing potholes in that city's roads.

See Anarchism in the United States and Portland Anarchist Road Care

Portland, Oregon

Portland is the most populous city in the U.S. state of Oregon, located in the Pacific Northwest region.

See Anarchism in the United States and Portland, Oregon

Possession (law)

In law, possession is the control a person intentionally exercises toward a thing.

See Anarchism in the United States and Possession (law)

Post-industrial society

In sociology, the post-industrial society is the stage of society's development when the service sector generates more wealth than the manufacturing sector of the economy.

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Post-scarcity

Post-scarcity is a theoretical economic situation in which most goods can be produced in great abundance with minimal human labor needed, so that they become available to all very cheaply or even freely.

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Post-Scarcity Anarchism

Post-Scarcity Anarchism is a collection of essays by Murray Bookchin, first published in 1971 by Ramparts Press.

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Postdevelopment theory

Postdevelopment theory (also post-development or anti-development or development criticism) holds that the whole concept and practice of development is a reflection of Western-Northern hegemony over the rest of the world.

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Prefigurative politics

Prefigurative politics are the modes of organization and social relationships that strive to reflect the future society being sought by the group.

See Anarchism in the United States and Prefigurative politics

Princeton, Massachusetts

Princeton is a town in Worcester County, Massachusetts, United States.

See Anarchism in the United States and Princeton, Massachusetts

Printing press

A printing press is a mechanical device for applying pressure to an inked surface resting upon a print medium (such as paper or cloth), thereby transferring the ink.

See Anarchism in the United States and Printing press

Proletariat

The proletariat is the social class of wage-earners, those members of a society whose only possession of significant economic value is their labour power (their capacity to work).

See Anarchism in the United States and Proletariat

Propaganda model

The propaganda model is a conceptual model in political economy advanced by Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky to explain how propaganda and systemic biases function in corporate mass media.

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Propaganda of the deed

Propaganda of the deed (or propaganda by the deed, from the French propagande par le fait) is specific political direct action meant to be exemplary to others and serve as a catalyst for revolution.

See Anarchism in the United States and Propaganda of the deed

Property

Property is a system of rights that gives people legal control of valuable things, and also refers to the valuable things themselves.

See Anarchism in the United States and Property

Prostitution

Prostitution is the business or practice of engaging in sexual activity in exchange for payment.

See Anarchism in the United States and Prostitution

Protests of 1968

The protests of 1968 comprised a worldwide escalation of social conflicts, which were predominantly characterized by the rise of left-wing politics, anti-war sentiment, civil rights urgency, youth counterculture within the silent and baby boomer generations, and popular rebellions against state militaries and bureaucracies.

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Province of Huesca

Huesca (Uesca, Osca), officially Huesca/Uesca, is a province of northeastern Spain, in northern Aragon.

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Pseudonym

A pseudonym or alias is a fictitious name that a person assumes for a particular purpose, which differs from their original or true name (orthonym).

See Anarchism in the United States and Pseudonym

Publishers Weekly

Publishers Weekly (PW) is an American weekly trade news magazine targeted at publishers, librarians, booksellers, and literary agents.

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Qilombo

Qilombo (formerly The Holdout) was a community space in West Oakland, California, USA, that operated from 2011 through 2019. It was originally opened as an anarchist, self-managed social center then changed its name and focus in 2014 to become a community space for local Black and Brown people. The center initiated the Afrika Town project and created the Afrika Town garden on an empty lot adjacent to the Qilombo building.

See Anarchism in the United States and Qilombo

Quakers

Quakers are people who belong to the Religious Society of Friends, a historically Protestant Christian set of denominations.

See Anarchism in the United States and Quakers

Quebec City

Quebec City (or; Ville de Québec), officially known as Québec, is the capital city of the Canadian province of Quebec.

See Anarchism in the United States and Quebec City

Queer anarchism

Queer anarchism, or anarcha-queer, is an anarchist school of thought that advocates anarchism and social revolution as a means of queer liberation and abolition of hierarchies such as homophobia, lesbophobia, transmisogyny, biphobia, transphobia, aphobia, heteronormativity, patriarchy, and the gender binary.

See Anarchism in the United States and Queer anarchism

Race Traitor (publication)

Race Traitor was a quarterly magazine founded in 1992 by John Garvey and Noel Ignatiev.

See Anarchism in the United States and Race Traitor (publication)

Rachel Carson

Rachel Louise Carson (May 27, 1907 – April 14, 1964) was an American marine biologist, writer, and conservationist whose sea trilogy (1941–1955) and book Silent Spring (1962) are credited with advancing marine conservation and the global environmental movement.

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Raffaele Schiavina

Raffaele Schiavina (8 April 1894 – 23 November 1987) was an Italian anarchist newspaper editor and writer also known by the pseudonyms Max Sartin, and Bruno.

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Rape

Rape is a type of sexual assault involving sexual intercourse or other forms of sexual penetration carried out against a person without their consent.

See Anarchism in the United States and Rape

Red Emma's

Red Emma's Bookstore Coffeehouse is a radical infoshop located in Baltimore, Maryland, United States and run by a worker-owner collective.

See Anarchism in the United States and Red Emma's

Reformism (historical)

Reformism is a type of social movement that aims to bring a social or also a political system closer to the community's ideal.

See Anarchism in the United States and Reformism (historical)

Regicide

Regicide is the purposeful killing of a monarch or sovereign of a polity and is often associated with the usurpation of power.

See Anarchism in the United States and Regicide

Representative democracy

Representative democracy (also called electoral democracy or indirect democracy) is a type of democracy where representatives are elected by the public.

See Anarchism in the United States and Representative democracy

Resurgence & Ecologist

Resurgence & Ecologist is a British bi-monthly magazine covering environmental issues, engaged activism, philosophy, arts and ethical living.

See Anarchism in the United States and Resurgence & Ecologist

Revolutionary Catalonia

Revolutionary Catalonia (21 July 1936 – 8 May 1937) was the period in which the autonomous region of Catalonia in northeast Spain was controlled or largely influenced by various anarchist, communist, and socialist trade unions, parties, and militias of the Spanish Civil War era.

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The Revolutionary Socialist League (RSL) was a Trotskyist group in the United States established in 1973 and disbanded in 1989.

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Right-wing terrorism

Right-wing terrorism, hard right terrorism, extreme right terrorism or far-right terrorism is terrorism that is motivated by a variety of different right-wing and far-right ideologies.

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Road to Freedom (journal)

Road to Freedom was a monthly anarchist political journal published by Hippolyte Havel.

See Anarchism in the United States and Road to Freedom (journal)

Robbery

Robbery (from Old French rober ("to steal, ransack, etc."), from Proto-West Germanic *rauba ("booty")) is the crime of taking or attempting to take anything of value by force, threat of force, or by use of fear.

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Robert Duncan (poet)

Robert Edward Duncan (January 7, 1919 – February 3, 1988) was an American poet and a devotee of Hilda "H.D." Doolittle and the Western esoteric tradition who spent most of his career in and around San Francisco.

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Robert Henri

Robert Henri (June 24, 1865 – July 12, 1929) was an American painter and teacher.

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Robert Owen

Robert Owen (14 May 1771 – 17 November 1858) was a Welsh textile manufacturer, philanthropist and social reformer, and a founder of utopian socialism and the co-operative movement.

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Rockwell Kent

Rockwell Kent (June 21, 1882 – March 13, 1971) was an American painter, printmaker, illustrator, writer, sailor, adventurer and voyager.

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Rolling Stone

Rolling Stone is an American monthly magazine that focuses on music, politics, and popular culture.

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Romanticism

Romanticism (also known as the Romantic movement or Romantic era) was an artistic and intellectual movement that originated in Europe towards the end of the 18th century.

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Ross Winn

Ross Winn (August 25, 1871 – August 8, 1912) was an American anarchist writer and publisher from Texas who was mostly active within the Southern United States.

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Rudolf Rocker

Johann Rudolf Rocker (March 25, 1873 – September 19, 1958) was a German anarchist writer and activist.

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Ruling class

In sociology, the ruling class of a society is the social class who set and decide the political and economic agenda of society.

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Russell Blackwell

Russell Blackwell was an American anarchist and former communist.

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Russian Empire

The Russian Empire was a vast empire that spanned most of northern Eurasia from its proclamation in November 1721 until its dissolution in March 1917.

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The Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (Russian SFSR or RSFSR), previously known as the Russian Soviet Republic and the Russian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic, and unofficially as Soviet Russia,Declaration of Rights of the laboring and exploited people, article I. was an independent federal socialist state from 1917 to 1922, and afterwards the largest and most populous constituent republic of the Soviet Union (USSR) from 1922 to 1991, until becoming a sovereign part of the Soviet Union with priority of Russian laws over Union-level legislation in 1990 and 1991, the last two years of the existence of the USSR..

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Sacco and Vanzetti

Nicola Sacco (April 22, 1891 – August 23, 1927) and Bartolomeo Vanzetti (June 11, 1888 – August 23, 1927) were Italian immigrants and anarchists who were controversially convicted of murdering Alessandro Berardelli and Frederick Parmenter, a guard and a paymaster, during the April 15, 1920, armed robbery of the Slater and Morrill Shoe Company in Braintree, Massachusetts, United States.

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Sacco and Vanzetti: The Anarchist Background

Sacco and Vanzetti: The Anarchist Background is a 1991 history book by Paul Avrich about Sacco and Vanzetti with a special emphasis on anarchist sources.

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Salt Lake City

Salt Lake City, often shortened to Salt Lake or SLC, is the capital and most populous city of the U.S. state of Utah.

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Sam Dolgoff

Sam Dolgoff (10 October 1902 – 15 October 1990) was an anarchist and anarcho-syndicalist from Russia who grew up, lived and was active in the United States.

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Samuel Gompers

Samuel Gompers (January 27, 1850December 13, 1924) was a British-born American cigar maker, labor union leader and a key figure in American labor history.

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Sasha and Emma

Sasha and Emma: The Anarchist Odyssey of Alexander Berkman and Emma Goldman is a 2012 history book about Alexander Berkman and Emma Goldman.

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Saul Yanovsky

Saul Yanovsky (April 18, 1864 – February 1, 1939) was an American anarchist and journalist.

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Second Spanish Republic

The Spanish Republic, commonly known as the Second Spanish Republic, was the form of democratic government in Spain from 1931 to 1939.

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Secularity

Secularity, also the secular or secularness (from Latin saeculum, "worldly" or "of a generation"), is the state of being unrelated or neutral in regards to religion.

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Security culture

Security culture is a set of practices used by activists, notably contemporary anarchists, to avoid, or mitigate the effects of, police surveillance and harassment and state control.

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Sedition

Sedition is overt conduct, such as speech or organization, that tends toward rebellion against the established order.

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Sedition Act of 1918

The Sedition Act of 1918 was an Act of the United States Congress that extended the Espionage Act of 1917 to cover a broader range of offenses, notably speech and the expression of opinion that cast the government or the war effort in a negative light or interfered with the sale of government bonds.

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Self-immolation of Aaron Bushnell

On February 25, 2024, Aaron Bushnell, a 25-year-old serviceman of the United States Air Force, died after setting himself on fire outside the front gate of the Embassy of Israel in Washington, D.C. Immediately before the act, which was live-streamed on Twitch, Bushnell said that he was protesting against "what people have been experiencing in Palestine at the hands of their colonizers" and declared that he "will no longer be complicit in genocide", after which he doused himself with a flammable liquid and set himself on fire.

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A self-managed social center, also known as a autonomous social center, is a self-organized community center in which anti-authoritarians put on voluntary activities.

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Self-sustainability

Self-sustainability and self-sufficiency are overlapping states of being in which a person, being, or system needs little or no help from, or interaction with others.

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Seven Days (newspaper)

Seven Days is an alternative weekly newspaper that is distributed every Wednesday in Vermont.

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Severino Di Giovanni

Severino Di Giovanni (17 March 1901 – 1 February 1931) was an Italian anarchist who immigrated to Argentina, where he became the best-known anarchist figure in that country for his campaign of violence in support of Sacco and Vanzetti and antifascism.

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Silent Spring

Silent Spring is an environmental science book by Rachel Carson.

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Simple living

Simple living refers to practices that promote simplicity in one's lifestyle.

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Slate (magazine)

Slate is an online magazine that covers current affairs, politics, and culture in the United States.

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Slavery

Slavery is the ownership of a person as property, especially in regards to their labour.

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Small Is Beautiful

Small Is Beautiful: A Study of Economics As If People Mattered is a collection of essays published in 1973 by German-born British economist E. F. Schumacher.

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Social anarchism, also known as left-wing anarchism or socialist anarchism, is the branch of anarchism that sees liberty and social equality as interrelated.

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Socialism is an economic and political philosophy encompassing diverse economic and social systems characterised by social ownership of the means of production, as opposed to private ownership.

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Sociology

Sociology is the scientific study of human society that focuses on society, human social behavior, patterns of social relationships, social interaction, and aspects of culture associated with everyday life.

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Spanish Army

The Spanish Army (lit) is the terrestrial army of the Spanish Armed Forces responsible for land-based military operations.

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Spanish Civil War

The Spanish Civil War (Guerra Civil Española) was a military conflict fought from 1936 to 1939 between the Republicans and the Nationalists.

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Spanish Revolution of 1936

The Spanish Revolution was a workers' social revolution that began at the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War in 1936 and for two to three years resulted in the widespread implementation of anarchist and, more broadly, libertarian socialist organizational principles throughout various portions of the country, primarily Catalonia, Aragon, Andalusia, and parts of the Valencian Community.

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Spiritualism (philosophy)

In philosophy, spiritualism is the concept, shared by a wide variety of systems of thought, that there is an immaterial reality that cannot be perceived by the senses.

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Springfield, Illinois

Springfield is the capital city of the U.S. state of Illinois and the county seat of Sangamon County.

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State capitalism

State capitalism is an economic system in which the state undertakes business and commercial (i.e., for-profit) economic activity and where the means of production are nationalized as state-owned enterprises (including the processes of capital accumulation, centralized management and wage labor).

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Stephen Pearl Andrews

Stephen Pearl Andrews (1812–1886) was an American libertarian socialist, individualist anarchist, linguist, political philosopher, and outspoken abolitionist.

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Steven T. Byington

Steven Tracy Byington (birthname Stephen) (December 10, 1869 – October 12, 1957) was a noted intellectual, translator, and American individualist anarchist.

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Stonewall riots

The Stonewall riots, also known as the Stonewall uprising, Stonewall rebellion, or simply Stonewall, were a series of spontaneous, violent demonstrations against a police raid that took place in the early morning hours of June 28, 1969, at the Stonewall Inn, in the Greenwich Village neighborhood of New York City.

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Stop Cop City

Stop Cop City (SCC), also known as Block Cop City & Defend the Atlanta Forest (DTF), is a decentralized movement in Atlanta, Georgia, United States, whose goal is to stop construction of the Atlanta Public Safety Training Center by the Atlanta Police Foundation and the City of Atlanta.

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Strikebreaker

A strikebreaker (sometimes pejoratively called a scab, blackleg, bootlicker, blackguard or knobstick) is a person who works despite a strike.

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Students for a Democratic Society

Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) was a national student activist organization in the United States during the 1960s and was one of the principal representations of the New Left.

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Targeted killing

Targeted killing is a form of assassination carried out by governments outside a judicial procedure or a battlefield.

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The Abolition of Work

"The Abolition of Work" is an essay written by Bob Black in 1985.

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The Alarm (newspaper)

The Alarm was an anarchist newspaper published in the American city of Chicago during the 1880s.

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The American Conservative

The American Conservative (TAC) is a magazine published by the American Ideas Institute which was founded in 2002.

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The Anarchist Collectives

The Anarchist Collectives: Workers’ Self-Management in the Spanish Revolution, 1936–1939 is a book of perspectives from the Spanish Revolution.

See Anarchism in the United States and The Anarchist Collectives

The Bulletin (Bend)

The Bulletin is a newspaper in Bend, Oregon, United States.

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The Ego and Its Own

The Ego and Its Own (Der Einzige und sein Eigentum), also known as The Unique and Its Property is an 1844 work by German philosopher Max Stirner.

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The Haymarket Tragedy

The Haymarket Tragedy is a 1984 history book by Paul Avrich about the Haymarket affair and the resulting trial.

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The labor problem

"The labor problem" is the economics term widely used toward the turn of the 20th century with various applications.

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The New York Times

The New York Times (NYT) is an American daily newspaper based in New York City.

See Anarchism in the United States and The New York Times

The Tyranny of Structurelessness

"The Tyranny of Structurelessness" is an essay by American feminist Jo Freeman that concerns power relations within radical feminist collectives.

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The Word (free love)

The Word was an individualist anarchist free love magazine founded in 1872.

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Thomas Hobbes

Thomas Hobbes (5 April 1588 – 4 December 1679) was an English philosopher.

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Tom Cornell

Thomas C. Cornell (April 11, 1934 – August 1, 2022) was an American journalist and a peace activist against the Vietnam War and the Iraq War.

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Topeka, Kansas

Topeka is the capital city of the U.S. state of Kansas and the county seat of Shawnee County.

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Toronto

Toronto is the most populous city in Canada and the capital city of the Canadian province of Ontario.

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Transcendentalism

Transcendentalism is a philosophical, spiritual, and literary movement that developed in the late 1820s and 1830s in the New England region of the United States.

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Tucson, Arizona

Tucson (Cuk Ṣon; Tucsón) is a city in and the county seat of Pima County, Arizona, United States, and is home to the University of Arizona.

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Tyrannicide

Tyrannicide or tyrannomachia is the killing or assassination of a tyrant or unjust ruler, purportedly for the common good, and usually by one of the tyrant's subjects.

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Ultra-leftism

In Marxism, ultra-leftism encompasses a broad spectrum of revolutionary communist currents that are generally Marxist and frequently anti-Leninist in perspective.

See Anarchism in the United States and Ultra-leftism

Unitarianism

Unitarianism is a nontrinitarian branch of Christianity.

See Anarchism in the United States and Unitarianism

United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom (UK) or Britain, is a country in Northwestern Europe, off the coast of the continental mainland.

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United States Attorney General

The United States attorney general (AG) is the head of the United States Department of Justice, and is the chief law enforcement officer of the federal government of the United States.

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United States Department of Justice

The United States Department of Justice (DOJ), also known as the Justice Department, is a federal executive department of the United States government tasked with the enforcement of federal law and administration of justice in the United States.

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United States National Security Council

The United States National Security Council (NSC) is the principal forum used by the president of the United States for consideration of national security, military, and foreign policy matters.

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United States Postal Service

The United States Postal Service (USPS), also known as the Post Office, U.S. Mail, or Postal Service, is an independent agency of the executive branch of the United States federal government responsible for providing postal service in the United States, its insular areas, and its associated states.

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University of Oregon

The University of Oregon (UO, U of O or Oregon) is a public research university in Eugene, Oregon.

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Unruly Equality

Unruly Equality: U.S. Anarchism in the Twentieth Century is a 2016 book by Andrew Cornell on post-war and contemporary anarchism in the United States.

See Anarchism in the United States and Unruly Equality

Up Against the Wall Motherfucker

Up Against the Wall Motherfucker, often shortened as The Motherfuckers or UAW/MF, was a Dadaist and Situationist anarchist affinity group based in New York City.

See Anarchism in the United States and Up Against the Wall Motherfucker

Upton Sinclair

Upton Beall Sinclair Jr. (September 20, 1878 – November 25, 1968) was an American author, muckraker, political activist and the 1934 Democratic Party nominee for governor of California.

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Utopia

A utopia typically describes an imaginary community or society that possesses highly desirable or near-perfect qualities for its members.

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Utopia, Ohio

Utopia is an unincorporated community in far southern Franklin Township, Clermont County, Ohio, United States, along the banks of the Ohio River.

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Vancouver

Vancouver is a major city in western Canada, located in the Lower Mainland region of British Columbia.

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Vanguard Group (anarchist)

The Vanguard Group was an anarchist political group active during the 1930s, which published the periodical Vanguard: Journal of Libertarian Communism, led by Sam Dolgoff (aka Sam Weiner, editor of Vanguard).

See Anarchism in the United States and Vanguard Group (anarchist)

Vegetarianism

Vegetarianism is the practice of abstaining from the consumption of meat (red meat, poultry, seafood, insects, and the flesh of any other animal).

See Anarchism in the United States and Vegetarianism

Venus

Venus is the second planet from the Sun.

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Vermont

Vermont is a state in the New England region of the Northeastern United States.

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Vice News

Vice News (stylized as VICE News) is Vice Media's alternative current affairs channel, producing daily documentary essays and video through its website and YouTube channel.

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Victor Yarros

Victor S. Yarros (1865–1956) was an American anarchist, lawyer and author.

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Victoria Woodhull

Victoria Claflin Woodhull (born Victoria California Claflin; September 23, 1838 – June 9, 1927), later Victoria Woodhull Martin, was an American leader of the women's suffrage movement who ran for president of the United States in the 1872 election.

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Vladimir Lenin

Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov (1870 – 21 January 1924), better known as Vladimir Lenin, was a Russian revolutionary, politician and political theorist.

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Voltairine de Cleyre

Voltairine de Cleyre (November 17, 1866 – June 20, 1912) was an American anarchist writer and public speaker.

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Voluntaryism

Voluntaryism (. Random House Unabridged Dictionary.; sometimes voluntarism) is used to describe the philosophy of Auberon Herbert, and later that of the authors and supporters of The Voluntaryist magazine, which supports a voluntary-funded state (i.e. "the Voluntary State"), meaning a lack of coercion and force in matters such as taxation.

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Walden

Walden (first published in 1854 as Walden; or, Life in the Woods) is a book by American transcendentalist writer Henry David Thoreau.

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Wall Street bombing

The Wall Street bombing was an act of terrorism on Wall Street at 12:01 pm on Thursday, September 16, 1920.

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Walsenburg, Colorado

Walsenburg is the statutory city that is the county seat and the most populous municipality of Huerfano County, Colorado, United States.

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Washington, D.C.

Washington, D.C., formally the District of Columbia and commonly known as Washington or D.C., is the capital city and federal district of the United States.

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We are the 99%

We are the 99% is a political slogan widely used and coined during the 2011 Occupy movement.

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Wendy McElroy

Wendy McElroy (born 1951) is a Canadian individualist feminist and voluntaryist writer.

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Western Federation of Miners

The Western Federation of Miners (WFM) was a labor union that gained a reputation for militancy in the mines of the western United States and British Columbia.

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White privilege

White privilege, or white skin privilege, is the societal privilege that benefits white people over non-white people in some societies, particularly if they are otherwise under the same social, political, or economic circumstances.

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Wiley-Blackwell

Wiley-Blackwell is an international scientific, technical, medical, and scholarly publishing business of John Wiley & Sons.

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William Batchelder Greene

William Batchelder Greene (April 4, 1819 – May 30, 1878) was an American individualist anarchist, Unitarian minister, soldier, mutualist, promoter of free banking in the United States, and member of the First International.

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William Godwin

William Godwin (3 March 1756 – 7 April 1836) was an English journalist, political philosopher and novelist.

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William McKinley

William McKinley (January 29, 1843September 14, 1901) was an American politician who served as the 25th president of the United States from 1897 until his assassination in 1901.

See Anarchism in the United States and William McKinley

Wisconsin Historical Society

The Wisconsin Historical Society (officially the State Historical Society of Wisconsin) is simultaneously a state agency and a private membership organization whose purpose is to maintain, promote and spread knowledge relating to the history of North America, with an emphasis on the state of Wisconsin and the trans-Allegheny West.

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Women's rights

Women's rights are the rights and entitlements claimed for women and girls worldwide.

See Anarchism in the United States and Women's rights

Women's suffrage

Women's suffrage is the right of women to vote in elections.

See Anarchism in the United States and Women's suffrage

Wordsworth Donisthorpe

Wordsworth Donisthorpe (24 March 1847 – 30 January 1914) was an English barrister, individualist anarchist and inventor, pioneer of cinematography and chess enthusiast.

See Anarchism in the United States and Wordsworth Donisthorpe

Worker's Friend Group

The Worker's Friend Group was a Jewish anarchist group active in London's East End in the early 1900s.

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World Economic Forum

The World Economic Forum (WEF) is an international non-governmental organization, think tank, and lobbying organisation based in Cologny, Canton of Geneva, Switzerland.

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World Publishing Company

The World Publishing Company was an American publishing company.

See Anarchism in the United States and World Publishing Company

World Trade Organization

The World Trade Organization (WTO) is an intergovernmental organization headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland that regulates and facilitates international trade.

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Wrongful execution

Wrongful execution is a miscarriage of justice occurring when an innocent person is put to death by capital punishment.

See Anarchism in the United States and Wrongful execution

Yale University Press

Yale University Press is the university press of Yale University.

See Anarchism in the United States and Yale University Press

Yiddish

Yiddish (ייִדיש, יידיש or אידיש, yidish or idish,,; ייִדיש-טײַטש, historically also Yidish-Taytsh) is a West Germanic language historically spoken by Ashkenazi Jews.

See Anarchism in the United States and Yiddish

Yom Kippur balls

The Yom Kippur balls were countercultural, antireligious festivities held by Jewish anarchists and socialists on Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the Jewish year and day of atonement.

See Anarchism in the United States and Yom Kippur balls

The Young People's Socialist League (YPSL), founded in 1907, was the official youth arm of the Socialist Party of America.

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Youngstown dynamite plot

The Youngstown dynamite plot was a foiled attempt by Galleanist anarchists to move a case of dynamite by train from Steubenville, Ohio, to Chicago, from January 17–18, 1918.

See Anarchism in the United States and Youngstown dynamite plot

Youth International Party

The Youth International Party (YIP), whose members were commonly called Yippies, was an American youth-oriented radical and countercultural revolutionary offshoot of the free speech and anti-war movements of the late 1960s.

See Anarchism in the United States and Youth International Party

Zine

A zine (short for magazine or fanzine) is a small-circulation self-published work of original or appropriated texts and images, usually reproduced via a copy machine.

See Anarchism in the United States and Zine

1919 United States anarchist bombings

A series of bombings were carried out or attempted by Galleanist anarchists from April through June 1919.

See Anarchism in the United States and 1919 United States anarchist bombings

1999 Seattle WTO protests

The 1999 Seattle WTO protests, sometimes referred to as the Battle of Seattle, were a series of anti-globalization protests surrounding the WTO Ministerial Conference of 1999, when members of the World Trade Organization (WTO) convened at the Washington State Convention and Trade Center in Seattle, Washington on November 30, 1999.

See Anarchism in the United States and 1999 Seattle WTO protests

2019 Tacoma attack

On July 13, 2019, Willem van Spronsen firebombed a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Tacoma, Washington.

See Anarchism in the United States and 2019 Tacoma attack

8th Street and St. Mark's Place

8th Street is a street in the New York City borough of Manhattan that runs from Sixth Avenue to Third Avenue, and also from Avenue B to Avenue D; its addresses switch from West to East as it crosses Fifth Avenue.

See Anarchism in the United States and 8th Street and St. Mark's Place

See also

1820s establishments in the United States

Left-wing politics in the United States

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anarchism_in_the_United_States

Also known as Adam Weaver, American anarchism, American anarchist, American anarchist movement, American anarchists, American individualist Anarchism, Anarchism in USA, Anarchism in the US, Anarchism in the USA, Anarchism in us, Anarchist People Of Color, Anarchists in the United States, Anarchy in the United States, Black Rose Anarchist Federation, Boston anarchism, Common Struggle, Common Struggle - Libertarian Communist Federation, Ernesto Aguilar, Fédération des Communistes Libertaires du Nord-Est, Green Mountain Anarchist Collective, History of anarchism in the United States, LWG, Libertarian Workers Group, Libertarian Workers' Group, List of American anarchists, Love & Rage, Love & Rage (organization), Love and Rage (organization), Love and Rage Anarchist Federation, Love and Rage Network, Love and Rage Revolutionary Anarchist Federation, Lucha Común, NEFAC, North Eastern Federation of Anarchist Communists, North Eastern Federation of Anarcho-Communists, North american individualist anarchist, Northeastern Anarchist, Northeastern Federation of Anarchist Communists, Northeastern Federation of Anarcho-communists, People of Color Organize!, Revolutionary Anarchist Bowling League, Social Revolutionary Anarchist Federation, The Northeastern Anarchist, Workers Solidarity Alliance, Workers' Solidarity Alliance.

, Anti-globalization movement, Anti-racism, Anti-war movement, Antifa (United States), Apoliticism, Artisan, Ashcan School, Associated Press, Atheism, Auberon Herbert, August Spies, Augustin Souchy, Autonomedia, Émile Armand, Bay View incident, Beat Generation, Benjamin Tucker, Berkeley, California, Bill Haywood, Bioregionalism, Birth control, Black bloc, Bohemianism, Bolsheviks, Boston, Braintree, Massachusetts, Brentwood, New York, Broadsheet, C. Wright Mills, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Campaign for Peace and Democracy, Canonization, Capitalism, Capitol Hill Occupied Protest, Catholic Church, Catholic Worker Movement, Center for Strategic and International Studies, Charles Fourier, Chicago, Chicago Police Department, Chicago Tribune, Christian anarchism, Christian pacifism, Cincinnati Time Store, Civil Disobedience (Thoreau), Clamor (magazine), Clandestine cell system, Class consciousness, Columbia University Press, Columbia, Missouri, Common Ground Collective, Communitas (book), Community organizing, Comstock Act of 1873, Confederación Nacional del Trabajo, Confiscation, Conscription in the United States, Contemporary anarchism, Cost the limit of price, Counterculture, Counterculture of the 1960s, Coup d'état, COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, CrimethInc., Cronaca Sovversiva, Dallas, Dave Van Ronk, David Edelstadt, David Graeber, Death of Lazarus Averbuch, Decentralization, Der Eigene, Di Yunge, Diggers, Diggers (theater), Direct action, Dissent (American magazine), Dissident, Distributism, District attorney, Dorothy Day, Dorothy Parker, DUMBA, Dwight Macdonald, Dyer Lum, E. F. Schumacher, Ecology, Economist, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Edward S. Herman, Egoist anarchism, Eight-hour day, Emma Goldman, Encarta, Enrico Arrigoni, Errico Malatesta, Eugene, Oregon, Executive Office of the President of the United States, Ezra Heywood, Federación Anarquista Ibérica, Federation of Organized Trades and Labor Unions, Felipe Pigna, Ferrer Center and Colony, Ferrer movement, Fifth Estate (periodical), Fine print, First Convention of the Industrial Workers of the World, First Red Scare, First-wave feminism, Florence Finch Kelly, Foreign policy of the United States, Fourierism, Fourth Estate, Fourth World, Frameup, Francisco Ferrer, Fraye Arbeter Shtime, Fredy Perlman, Free banking, Free love, Free Society, Freedom of speech, Freethought, Freiheit (1879), Friedrich Nietzsche, Future Primitive and Other Essays, G8, Gail Dolgin, Gary Snyder, Gay Liberation Front, Gender role, General strike, George Bellows, George Bernard Shaw, George Jackson Brigade, George Woodcock, Georgism, Gerrard Winstanley, Gestalt therapy, Giuseppe Ciancabilla, Give-away shop, Globalization, Glossary of anarchism, Green anarchism, Green politics, Groucho Marx, Growing Up Absurd, Guntersville, Alabama, H. G. Wells, Hardcore punk, Harlem, Hartford Courant, Haymarket affair, Henrik Ibsen, Henry Appleton (anarchist), Henry Clay Frick, Henry David Thoreau, Herbert Spencer, Hippie, History of anarchism, History of the socialist movement in the United States, Homestead strike, Homosexuality, Humanitarianism, Hurricane Katrina, Hutchins Hapgood, Illegalism, IMDb, Immigrants Against the State, Immigration Act of 1903, Immigration Act of 1918, Individualist anarchism, Individualist anarchism in Europe, Individualist anarchism in the United States, Industrial Workers of the World, Institute for Anarchist Studies, Institute for Social Ecology, Insurrectionary anarchism, Intellectual property, Intentional community, International Workers' Day, International Working People's Association, International Workingmen's Association, Internet, IWA–AIT, J. Edgar Hoover, J. William Lloyd, Jack London, James J. Martin (historian), James L. Walker, Janet Biehl, Jo Labadie, Joe Hill (activist), Joe Hill House, Johann Most, John Cage, John Dos Passos, John Henry Mackay, John Moore (anarchist), John Papworth, John Zerzan, Joseph Pulitzer, Joshua K. Ingalls, Josiah Warren, Julian Beck, Julius Caesar, Jurist, Kafka's Prayer, Karl Marx, Katie Sierra free speech case, Kaunas, Kenneth Rexroth, Killing of Manuel Esteban Paez Terán, Kirkpatrick Sale, Knights of Labor, Kuwasi Balagoon, KWVA, L'Adunata dei refrattari, Labor history of the United States, Labour movement, Lakewood Township, New Jersey, Left-wing politics, Leo Tolstoy, Leon Czolgosz, Leonard Abbott, Leopold Kohr, Lev Chernyi, Leviathan (Hobbes book), Libertarian Book Club and League, Libertarian socialism, Libertarianism, Liberty (1881–1908 periodical), List of anarchist periodicals, Living My Life, Lois Waisbrooker, Lorenzo Kom'boa Ervin, Lower East Side, Lucifer, Lucy Parsons, Lucy Parsons Center, Luigi Galleani, Luisa Capetillo, Lysander Spooner, Madison, Wisconsin, Magazine, Mahatma Gandhi, Manufacturing Consent, Marcus Junius Brutus, Margaret Sanger, Mario Buda, Market socialism, Martin Buber, Martin Luther King Jr., Marx Edgeworth Lazarus, Marxism, Marxists Internet Archive, Masthead (American publishing), Max Nettlau, Max Stirner, May Day, Media studies, Messianism, Mexican–American War, Michael Dukakis, Militarism, Mises Institute, Modern Times (community), Montessori education, Moses Harman, Most–Grottkau debate, Mother Earth (magazine), Movement for a New Society, Murray Bookchin, Murray Bookchin bibliography, Mutual aid, Mutualism (economic theory), My Disillusionment in Russia, Nationalist faction (Spanish Civil War), Natural rights and legal rights, Nellie Dick, New Harmony, Indiana, New Left, New social movements, New York City, New York Social Revolutionary Club, New York World, News media, Noam Chomsky, Nonviolent resistance, Norman Mailer, Occupy movement, Occupy Wall Street, Oxford University Press, Pacifism, Palmer Raids, Partisans of Freedom, Paterson, New Jersey, Paul Avrich, Paul Eltzbacher, Paul Goodman, Pen name, Penal labour, Percival Goodman, Peter Lamborn Wilson, Peter Maurin, Phalansterium, Philosophical anarchism, Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, Pigasus (politics), Pioneers of American Freedom, Piscataway, New Jersey, Platformism, Political prisoner, Political science, Politics (1940s magazine), Portland Anarchist Road Care, Portland, Oregon, Possession (law), Post-industrial society, Post-scarcity, Post-Scarcity Anarchism, Postdevelopment theory, Prefigurative politics, Princeton, Massachusetts, Printing press, Proletariat, Propaganda model, Propaganda of the deed, Property, Prostitution, Protests of 1968, Province of Huesca, Pseudonym, Publishers Weekly, Qilombo, Quakers, Quebec City, Queer anarchism, Race Traitor (publication), Rachel Carson, Raffaele Schiavina, Rape, Red Emma's, Reformism (historical), Regicide, Representative democracy, Resurgence & Ecologist, Revolutionary Catalonia, Revolutionary Socialist League (U.S.), Right-wing terrorism, Road to Freedom (journal), Robbery, Robert Duncan (poet), Robert Henri, Robert Owen, Rockwell Kent, Rolling Stone, Romanticism, Ross Winn, Rudolf Rocker, Ruling class, Russell Blackwell, Russian Empire, Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, Sacco and Vanzetti, Sacco and Vanzetti: The Anarchist Background, Salt Lake City, Sam Dolgoff, Samuel Gompers, Sasha and Emma, Saul Yanovsky, Second Spanish Republic, Secularity, Security culture, Sedition, Sedition Act of 1918, Self-immolation of Aaron Bushnell, Self-managed social center, Self-sustainability, Seven Days (newspaper), Severino Di Giovanni, Silent Spring, Simple living, Slate (magazine), Slavery, Small Is Beautiful, Social anarchism, Socialism, Sociology, Spanish Army, Spanish Civil War, Spanish Revolution of 1936, Spiritualism (philosophy), Springfield, Illinois, State capitalism, Stephen Pearl Andrews, Steven T. Byington, Stonewall riots, Stop Cop City, Strikebreaker, Students for a Democratic Society, Targeted killing, The Abolition of Work, The Alarm (newspaper), The American Conservative, The Anarchist Collectives, The Bulletin (Bend), The Ego and Its Own, The Haymarket Tragedy, The labor problem, The New York Times, The Tyranny of Structurelessness, The Word (free love), Thomas Hobbes, Tom Cornell, Topeka, Kansas, Toronto, Transcendentalism, Tucson, Arizona, Tyrannicide, Ultra-leftism, Unitarianism, United Kingdom, United States Attorney General, United States Department of Justice, United States National Security Council, United States Postal Service, University of Oregon, Unruly Equality, Up Against the Wall Motherfucker, Upton Sinclair, Utopia, Utopia, Ohio, Vancouver, Vanguard Group (anarchist), Vegetarianism, Venus, Vermont, Vice News, Victor Yarros, Victoria Woodhull, Vladimir Lenin, Voltairine de Cleyre, Voluntaryism, Walden, Wall Street bombing, Walsenburg, Colorado, Washington, D.C., We are the 99%, Wendy McElroy, Western Federation of Miners, White privilege, Wiley-Blackwell, William Batchelder Greene, William Godwin, William McKinley, Wisconsin Historical Society, Women's rights, Women's suffrage, Wordsworth Donisthorpe, Worker's Friend Group, World Economic Forum, World Publishing Company, World Trade Organization, Wrongful execution, Yale University Press, Yiddish, Yom Kippur balls, Young People's Socialist League (1907), Youngstown dynamite plot, Youth International Party, Zine, 1919 United States anarchist bombings, 1999 Seattle WTO protests, 2019 Tacoma attack, 8th Street and St. Mark's Place.