Neither nationalisation nor privatisation 1945-1950: An anarchist approach This volume is one of a set which celebrates the Freedom Press Centenary by reprinting articles from…
Report Submitted to the Confederal Committee of the CNT by Delegate Angel Pestaña regarding his Conduct at the Second Congress of the Third International – Angel Pestaña Angel Pestaña’s official report to the Confederal Committee of the CNT regarding…
Workers' struggles in East Asia (August 2012) Summary and links to news stories of workers' struggles around East Asia during August 2012 and related resources. The most important stories…
Black Flag on hiatus I’m a little sad to announce that Black Flag won’t be coming out with a London Bookfair issue this year, as all three of the core editorial members are just too swamped with other commitments to put it together.
These days in Athens While the Greek government decides on the latest budget cuts strikes and protests return to the streets of Athens.
A Critique of the Idea of Happiness and a Refutation of Hedonism – Félix Rodrigo Mora An abridged 2008 version of a longer work by the Spanish author, Félix Rodrigo Mora, that expresses…
Interview - Los Amigos de Ludd A 2006 interview with the Spanish group, Los Amigos de Ludd, that published a journal of the same name until 2006, on leftism, environmentalism,…
Fighting for ourselves - preview Preview excerpts of the forthcoming text by the Solidarity Federation setting out the background and the tasks ahead for anarcho-syndicalists in…
Report from St. Imier International Congress, 8th-12th August 2012 This year marks the 140 year anniversary of the first anarchist International held at St.Imier,…
Anarchism and psychology - Dennis Fox Article by Dennis Fox on anarchism and psychology. Originally from http://www.dennisfox.net/papers/anarchism_and_psychology.html
Wildcat strike in Antep, Turkey: “We want to live like human beings” The textile workers in the organised industrial zone of Antep, a city on the border of the Kurdish…
Gradualism Malatesta lays out why anarchism must be gradualist, in the real sense of the word. He describes the designs of anarchy both before and after the revolution, and how desires to destroy must not undermine it. He argues that 'everything in nature and in life changes by degrees, and this is no less true of anarchy. It can only come about little by little'. That if anarchy means perfection it cannot come in one great…