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Prison abolition movement
The prison abolition movement seeks to abolish prison and the prison system which advocates of the movement claim are inhumane. Prison abolitionists present a broad critique of the modern Western criminal justice system, alleged to be both racist and classist as well as ineffectual at reforming criminals, decreasing crime, or reconciling the victims of crime.
Prison_abolition_movement
4.23.83.100
User_talk:4.23.83.100
WBAI
WBAI, a part of the Pacifica Radio Network, is a non-commercial, listener-supported radio station, broadcasting at 99.5 FM in New York City.Its programming is leftist/progressive, and a mixture of leftist political advocacy tinged with aspects of its complex and varied history, such as Freeform radio, which WBAI played a role in developing, as well as various music.
WBAI
Ernst Hanfstaengl
Ernst Franz Sedgwick Hanfstaengl (born Munich, Germany, February 2, 1887 - November 6, 1975) worked for both Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Adolf Hitler.
Ernst_Hanfstaengl
Surrealism/Archive 3
Talk:Surrealism/Archive_3
Palestine-info
User:Palestine-info
2002 Venezuelan coup d'état attempt
The Venezuelan coup attempt of 2002 was a failed coup d'état on April 11, 2002 that lasted only 47 hours, whereby the head of state President Hugo Chávez was illegally detained, the National Assembly and the Supreme Court dissolved, and the country's Constitution declared void.Venezuelan Federation of Chambers of Commerce (Fedecámaras) president Pedro Carmona was installed as interim president.
2002_Venezuelan_coup_d'état_attempt
Margaret Hassan
Talk:Margaret_Hassan
Israel/Israel and the Occupied Territories-5
Talk:Israel/Israel_and_the_Occupied_Territories-5
Japanese war crimes
Japanese war crimes occurred during the period of Japanese imperialism. Some of the incidents have also been described as an Asian Holocaust and Japanese war atrocities. Some war crimes were committed by military personnel from the Empire of Japan in the late 19th century, although most took place during the first part of the Shōwa Era, the name given to the reign of Emperor Hirohito, until the military defeat of the Empire of Japan, in 1945.
Japanese_war_crimes
American Center for International Labor Solidarity
The American Center for International Labor Solidarity (ACILS), better known as the Solidarity Center, is a non-profit organization established in 1997 by the AFL-CIO, the labor federation that represents 9 million working men and women in the United States, to assist unions and workers around the world.
American_Center_for_International_Labor_Solidarity
Media democracy
Media democracy is a production and distribution model which promotes a mass media system that informs and empowers all members of society, and enhances democratic values. The term also refers to a modern social movement evident in countries all over the world which attempts to make mainstream media more accountable to the publics they serve and to create more democratic alternatives.
Media_democracy
Zury Ríos Montt
Zury Mayté Ríos Montt Sosa de Weller (born January 1968) is a Guatemalan politician, affiliated with the Guatemalan Republican Front (FRG) political party. She is currently serving her third term in Congress, where she serves as Chair of the Foreign Relations Committee. She has also served on the Steering Committee of the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) and was the Chair of the IPU's Latin American Group where she was elected unanimously by parliamentarians from the Latin American nations.
Zury_Ríos_Montt
Lancet surveys of Iraq War casualties
The Lancet, one of the oldest scientific medical journals in the world, published two peer-reviewed studies on the effect of the 2003 invasion of Iraq and subsequent occupation on the Iraqi mortality rate. The first was published in 2004; the second (by many of the same authors) in 2006. The studies estimate the number of excess deaths caused by the occupation, both direct (combatants plus non-combatants) and indirect (due to increased law
Lancet_surveys_of_Iraq_War_casualties
Shock therapy (economics)
Talk:Shock_therapy_(economics)
Occupation of Iraq, 2003-2004/Archive 1
Talk:Occupation_of_Iraq,_2003-2004/Archive_1
Argentinos Juniors
Argentinos Juniors is an Argentine football club, founded in La Paternal, Buenos Aires, on 15 August 1904. The club was originally called the “Martyrs of Chicago”, in homage to the eight anarchists imprisoned or hanged after the 1886 Haymarket Riot in Chicago.
Argentinos_Juniors
Koreans in Japan
Koreans_in_Japan
Human shield action to Iraq
Human shield action to Iraq was a group of people who travelled to Iraq to act as human shields with the purpose of preventing the U.S.-led coalition troops from bombing certain locations during the 2003 Invasion of Iraq.
Human_shield_action_to_Iraq
Nicholas von Hoffman
Nicholas von Hoffman (born October 16, 1929 in New York City) is an American journalist and author of German-Russian extraction, descendant of Melchior Hoffman and son of Carl von Hoffman. He wrote for the Washington Post and later well-known to TV audiences as a "Point-Counterpoint" commentator for CBS's 60 Minutes, from which he was fired by Don Hewitt in 1974.
Nicholas_von_Hoffman
Fifth International
The phrase Fifth International refers to the efforts made by some sections of the far left to create a new Workers' International.
Fifth_International
Rendition aircraft
]Rendition aircraft are aircraft used by national governments to move prisoners internationally, a practice known as rendition, sometimes referred to as extraordinary rendition. The aircraft listed in this article have been identified in international news media as being used for prisoner transports.
Rendition_aircraft
Noam Chomsky/Archive 2
Talk:Noam_Chomsky/Archive_2
Albamuth
User:Albamuth
Correlli Barnett
Correlli Douglas Barnett CBE FRSL (born June 28 1927) is an English military historian, who has also written extensively on the United Kingdom's "industrial decline".
Correlli_Barnett
Church Committee
Church Committee is the common term referring to the United States Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities, a U.S. Senate committee chaired by Senator Frank Church (D-ID) in 1975. A precursor to the U.S. Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, the committee investigated intelligence gathering for illegality by the CIA and FBI after certain activities had been revealed by the Watergate affair.
Church_Committee
Ta'ayush
Ta'ayush (lit. "coexistence" or "life in common" in Arabic) is a grassroots non-violent organization, which was established in the fall of 2000, by Gadi Algazy and a group of Palestinians and Jewish citizens of Israel. The organization claims to "work against the occupation and against the discrimination done by the state to Palestinian Israelis, and fight against all kinds and forms of separation and segregation between Arabs and Jews and between Israelis and Palestinians, both in Israel and the Occupied Territories."
Ta'ayush
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (film)
Charlie_and_the_Chocolate_Factory_(film)
University of St. Thomas (Texas)
Talk:University_of_St._Thomas_(Texas)
David Graeber
David Rolfe Graeber (born 12 February 1961) is an American anthropologist and anarchist. On June 15, 2007, Graeber accepted the offer of a lectureship in the anthropology department at Goldsmiths College, University of London, where he currently holds the title of Reader in Social Anthropology.
David_Graeber
Chris Crass
Chris Crass is an anarchist organizer and writer from San Francisco, California. He is an organizer with the Catalyst Project, which is a center for political education and movement building. The Catalyst Project grew out of the Challenging White Supremacy workshop.
Chris_Crass
Transparency International
Talk:Transparency_International
Fare strike
fare strike is a direct action in which people in a city with a public transit system carry out mass fare evasion as a method of protest. Jumping turnstiles, boarding buses through the back or very quickly through the front, and leaving doors open in subway stations are all tactics that have been utilized.
Fare_strike
Political spectrum/Archive 1
Talk:Political_spectrum/Archive_1
National Labor Federation
The National Labor Federation (NATLFED) claims to be a network of local community associations, run exclusively by volunteers, that aim to organize workers excluded from collective bargaining protections by U.S. labor law. Although the groups affiliated with NATLFED have denied having a political affiliation,
National_Labor_Federation
Coalition of Women for a Just Peace
Coalition_of_Women_for_a_Just_Peace
Noam Chomsky/Archive 3
Talk:Noam_Chomsky/Archive_3
Yasser Arafat/Archive 4
Talk:Yasser_Arafat/Archive_4
Michael Ratner
Michael Ratner (born 1943, Cleveland, Ohio) is a attorney and president of the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR), a non-profit human rights litigation organization based in New York, New York.Ratner is known for his human rights activism.He was co-counsel in representing the Guantanamo Bay detainees in the United States Supreme Court, where, in June 2004, the court decided his clients have the right to test the legality of their detentions in court.
Michael_Ratner
Post-invasion Iraq, 2003–2006/Archive 2
Talk:Post-invasion_Iraq,_2003–2006/Archive_2
Gulf War/Archive 1
Talk:Gulf_War/Archive_1
Worker cooperative
worker cooperative is a cooperative owned and democratically controlled by its worker-owners. This control may be exercised in a number of ways. In 'pure' forms of worker co-operative, all shares are held by the workforce with no outside or consumer owners, and each member has one voting share.
Worker_cooperative
Post-invasion Iraq, 2003–2006/Archive 4
Talk:Post-invasion_Iraq,_2003–2006/Archive_4
Eric Clapton
Talk:Eric_Clapton
Bosnian Genocide
Bosnian Genocide is used to refer either to the genocide committed by Bosnian Serb forces in Srebrenica in 1995, or to ethnic cleansing that took place during the 1992-1995 Bosnian War.In the 1990s, several authorities, in line with a minority of legal scholars, asserted that ethnic cleansing as carried out by elements of the Bosnian Serb army was genocide.
Bosnian_Genocide
Noam Chomsky/Archive 4
Talk:Noam_Chomsky/Archive_4
Boston Social Forum
Boston_Social_Forum
Walter Wink
emeritus at Auburn Theological Seminary in New York City. His faculty discipline is biblical interpretation. Wink earned his Master of Divinity (1959) and his Ph.D. (1963) degrees from Union Theological Seminary in New York City. Ordained a Methodist minister in 1961, he served as Pastor of First United Methodist Church, in Hitchcock, Texas from 1962-67.
Walter_Wink
Anarchism sidebar/Archive 2
Template_talk:Anarchism_sidebar/Archive_2
Si-Zerrouk massacre
The Si Zerrouk massacre took place in the Si Zerrouk neighborhood in the south of Larbaa in Algeria on 27 July 1997. About 50 people were killed.In 1997, Algeria was at the peak of a brutal civil conflict that had begun after the military's cancellation of 1992 elections set to be won by the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS).
Si-Zerrouk_massacre