ANR Anarchism

Zines about anarchism, anarchist theory, and anarchists, or zines that apply an anarchist analysis to an issue or topic.

Accounting for Ourselves

I. Introduction -- Getting started -- Gender frameworks -- Restorative and transformative justice // 2. Where We're At -- Anarchist community accountability: Recent history and the current state of things -- Ten pitfalls of community accountability process // 3. New directions and further questions -- Direction 1: Survivor-led vigilantism -- Direction 2: Prevention through gender-based organizing -- Direction 3: Not accountability, but conflict resolution -- Direction 4: Concentric circles of affinity // Appendix -- Works cited -- Resources list

Run This City & Short Circuit: Anarchist Writings On Gentrification and Class Power in the Urban Environment

Originally published in Volume 1 of Mortar, a theoretical journal available online at linchpin.ca, this zine features two pieces centred around building class consciousness in urban environments. Large emphasis on gentrification processes and Marxist/anarchist perspectives.

Anarchism and Revolutionary Strategy : Insurrectionary Councilism

This piece is a companion to another from the Radical Education Department, “The Insurrectionary Campus: A Strategy Proposal”

Contents:

Intro

Part 1: Conditions of Radical Struggle

The law of uneven, combined regression
Forces and relations of revolt
Neoliberalism, regression, fascism

Part 2: Insurrectionary Councilism

Movement councils
Shared revolutionary culture
Direct action and "emergent strategy"
Federation
Non-dogmatic radicalism

Outro

Social War on Stolen Native Land

The title is written in black sans-serif text on a white background that says "Social War On Stolen Native Land", accompanied by a colour photograph of two individuals dressed in all black burning a Canadian flag at an indigenous gathering. Below, in black
A half-page colour zine detailing the perspectives, struggles, triumphs, and stories of various groups of anarchists, indigenous people of Turtle Island (specifically the occupied lands classed as "Canada") and how their struggles are interconnected. These stories come from all over "Canada", with a particular focus on articles from the west coast, and "Quebec". The zine, though compiled and released in 2016, is comprised of various blog posts and editorials from as far back as 2003, compiling over a decade and a half of indigenous stories, anarchist stories, their mutual struggles, and constructively addressing fundamental differences in their mindsets towards societal structuring, reconciliation and land back movements.