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== External Links == | == External Links == | ||
* [https://anarchyinaction.org/index.php?title=People_Without_Government:_An_Anthropology_of_Anarchy People Without Government] at anarchyinaction.org | * [https://anarchyinaction.org/index.php?title=People_Without_Government:_An_Anthropology_of_Anarchy People Without Government] at anarchyinaction.org | ||
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[[Category:Anthropology]] | [[Category:Anthropology]] |
Revision as of 17:44, 3 April 2024
People Without Government: An Anthropology of Anarchy is a 1990 book by Harold Barclay which explores various anarchist societies in various stages of economic production (from forager to farming to industrial).
Summary
On The Nature of Anarchy
Some Observations of Procedure
Anarchy Among Hunter-Gatherers
Forager societies are the oldest and most natural way of organising a group of people. Yet almost nobody lives like this, often trading luxury furs for vehicles and weapons on the international capitalist market.
The Inuit (who live in the Arctic region of North America) have organised into an anarchist systems, living in small bands with no fixed rulers (although there are some trusted leaders based on their skill and knowledge) and near gender equality. Yet Inuit society is also fairly violent, with disputes not solved with restorative means but instead through various competitions like wrestling. Gossip and shame are used to stop undesirable behaviour, but people often get away with crimes. Inuit society also demonstrates the Tyranny of Structurelessness, with religious shaman (responsible for medical care and communication with the gods) often have disproportionate power in a society. Inuits show that proto-hierarchical forms of domination might emerge through religion as certain figures carry a monopoly on spirituality.
Anarchist Gardeners
Anarchist Herders
Anarchy in Agricultural Societies
Anarchy in the Modern World
Do Anarchist Polities have a Message?
External Links
- People Without Government at anarchyinaction.org