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Revision as of 13:34, 15 September 2019
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<title source="title1"> <default>Libertarian Socialism</default> </title> <image source="image1">
</image> <label>Label</label> <label>Label</label> </infobox> Libertarian Socialism (sometimes called Socialist Libertarianism or Free Socialism) is a political philosophy that advocates for the ability of people to directly control the institutions that control them such as schools, workplaces, community and culture.
Strategies
Various different strategies have been advocated for the establishment of a libertarian socialist societies.
Tendencies
Anarchism
- Anarcha-Feminism
- Anarchism Without Adjectives
- Anarcho-Collectivism
- Anarcho-Communism
- Anarcho-Naturism
- Anarcho-Pacifism
- Anarcho-Primitivism
- Anarcho-Syndicalism
- Black Anarchism
- Christian Anarchism
- Egoist Anarchism
- Existentialist Anarchism
- Green/Eco-Anarchism
- Individiualist Anarchism
- Insurrectionary Anarchism
- Mutualism
- Platformism
- Post-Anarchism
- Post-Colonial/Indigenist Anarchism
- Queer Anarchism
- Synthesist Anarchism
Libertarian Marxism
- Autonomism
- Communization
- Council Communism
- De Leonism
- Johnson-Forest Tendency
- Left Communism
- Luxemburgism
- Situationism
Left-Libertarianism
- Georgism/Geolibertarianism
- Steiner–Vallentyne school
Other
- Communalism
- Democratic Confederalism
- Gandhism
- Green Syndicalism
- Guild Socialism
- Inclusive Democracy
- Libertarian Municipalism
- Libertarian Possibilism
- Social Ecology
Criticism
See Also: Criticism of Libertarian Socialism
Libertarian Socialism is often viewed as unfeasible, dangerous, too optimistic about human nature or unable to organise certain key societal infrastructures without centralisation.