ANTI-STATISM

(Redirected from Anti-statist)
'Anti-statism' refers to opposition to state intervention into personal, social or economic affairs. Anti-statist views may reject the state completely and immediately (e.g. anarchism), they may wish to reduce the size and scope of the state to a minimum (e.g. minarchism), or they may advocate a stateless society as the ultimate goal of a gradual or step-by-step evolution (e.g. Marxism). Henry David Thoreau expressed this evolutionary anti-statist view in his essay "Civil Disobedience:"
:''I heartily accept the motto,—"That government is best which governs least"; and I should like to see it acted up to more rapidly and systematically. Carried out, it finally amounts to this, which also I believe,—"That government is best which governs not at all"; and when men and women are prepared for it, that will be the kind of government which they will have.''[1]

Contents
General categories
Anti-statist philosophies
Completely anti-statist
Partially anti-statist, or anti-statism as an ideal or deferred programmatic goal
Chronology of anti-statist writing
See also

General categories


Radical anti-statists differ greatly according to the beliefs they hold ''in addition'' to anti-statism. Thus the categories of anti-statist thought are sometimes classified as collectivist or individualist. Interpretations of the principles of anarchism are often contested between adherents of anarchism. There are social(ist) anarchists who are opposed to private property (such as anarcho-syndicalism and anarchist communism) and individualist anarchists who embrace private property (such as mutualism or anarcho-capitalism).
Anti-statist philosophies that seek to minimize the role or influence of the state are difficult to delimit. They range from panarchy (states competing in the same territory for patronage, an arrangement hard to distinguish from statelessness) to Marxism and Christian postmillennialism, which envision statelessness in the remote future, to liberalism (or more precisely classical liberalism), which seeks only to reduce, not abolish, the role of the state.
A significant difficulty in determining whether a thinker or philosophy is anti-statist is the problem of defining the state itself. Terminology has changed over time, and past writers often used the word, "state" in a different sense than we use it today. Thus, the anarchist Michael Bakunin used the term simply to mean a governing organization. Other writers used the term "state" to mean any law-making or law-enforcement agency. Karl Marx defined the state as the institution used by the ruling class of a country to maintain the conditions of its rule. According to Max Weber, the state is an organization with an effective monopoly on the use of force in a particular geographic area.

Anti-statist philosophies



Completely anti-statist


★ General:


Anarchism


Libertarian socialism


Anarcho-communism


Anarcho-syndicalism


Anarcho-primitivism


Anarcho-capitalism


Individualist anarchism


Geoanarchism


Mutualism


Agorism


Anarcha-feminism


Christian anarchism


Green anarchism


Crypto-anarchism


National anarchism


Black anarchism


Anarcho-pacifism


Post-left anarchy


Situationism


Utopian anarchism


Nihilist anarchism

Partially anti-statist, or anti-statism as an ideal or deferred programmatic goal


★ Political philosophies related to liberalism:


Classical liberalism


Libertarianism


Objectivism


Minarchism

★ Political philosophies related to Marxism:


Communism


Left Communism and Council Communism


Leninism


Trotskyism


Maoism


Autonomism


Titoism

Chronology of anti-statist writing


::'1548' — Étienne de la Boétie, ''
::'1793' — William Godwin, ''An Enquiry Concerning Political Justice''
::'1825' — Thomas Hodgskin, ''Labour Defended against the Claims of Capital''
::'1840' — Pierre Proudhon, ''What is Property?''
::'1844' — Max Stirner, ''The Ego and Its Own''
::'1848' — Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, ''The Communist Manifesto''
::'1849' — Henry David Thoreau, ''Civil Disobedience''
::'1849' — Frédéric Bastiat, ''The Law''
::'1849' — Gustave de Molinari, ''The Production of Security''
::'1851' — Herbert Spencer, ''The Right to Ignore the State''
::'1866' — Michael Bakunin, ''Revolutionary Catechism''
::'1867' — Lysander Spooner, ''No Treason''
::'1886' — Benjamin Tucker, ''State Socialism and Anarchism: How far they agree, & wherein they differ''
::'1902' — Peter Kropotkin, ''Mutual Aid''
::'1917' — Vladimir Lenin, ''The State and Revolution''
::'1935' — Albert Jay Nock, ''Our Enemy, the State''
::'1962' — Murray Rothbard, ''Man, Economy & State with Power and Market''
::'2001' — Kevin A. Carson, ''The Iron Fist Behind the Invisible Hand

See also



statism

anarchy

anarcho-

anarchist communities

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