Category:Politics: Difference between revisions
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* The [[Liberty of the Networked]]. Thoughtful essay by Tony Curzon Price on the liberty-phobic vs. liberty-genic effects of the internet. [http://www.opendemocracy.net/article/email/the-liberty-of-the-networked-part-1 Part 1]; [http://www.opendemocracy.net/node/47324 Part 2] | * The [[Liberty of the Networked]]. Thoughtful essay by Tony Curzon Price on the liberty-phobic vs. liberty-genic effects of the internet. [http://www.opendemocracy.net/article/email/the-liberty-of-the-networked-part-1 Part 1]; [http://www.opendemocracy.net/node/47324 Part 2] | ||
* The [http://www.web2fordev.net/component/content/article/1-latest-news/73-from-local-to-global-social-networks-address-world-challenges Hierarchy of Political Engagement on the Web] | |||
==Key Blogs== | ==Key Blogs== | ||
Revision as of 17:28, 9 July 2009
Individually, we are one drop. Together, we are an ocean.
- Ryunosuke Satoro [1]
To find ways, against all odds, to bring together all the various highly differentiated and often local movements into some kind of commonality of purpose.
- David Harvey, Spaces of Hope [2]
Introduction
This page is for political and activist practices and processes that are somehow influenced by the peer to peer dynamic. See also the related page on P2P Governance Concepts, which deals with 'how we manage peer to peer processes'. We will particularly use this section to monitor Civic Hacking projects.
Not all concepts from the Encyclopedia have been ported to this page yet: only the terms from A-D (first two columns).
Here is a Podcast on the political aspects of P2P.
The P2P Foundation supports the Manifest for the recovery of common goods of humanity
Key article: Alex Steffen: Optimism as a Political Act
Introductory Articles
Important Policy statement: Five Principles of Openness and Transparency in Politics
My own articles are listed here at http://del.icio.us/mbauwens/Bauwens-Articles
- Changing Self, Community, and Society, by Inspector Lohman #[3]
- Openness is not sufficient for Democracy. Bill Thompson.
- Towards planetary, peer to peer, and green consciousness. Dale Carrico.
- The Networked Public Sphere: updating Habermas
- A Cluetrain Manifesto for People-Powered Politics: the 95 theses reworked for politics
- Stephen Downes: Values for the left in an age of distribution
- Social Network Sites for change: overview
- Cass Sunstein: Is the Internet a blessing for democracy?
How To
- Online Advocacy Guide. By the Tactical Tech Collective: "a collection of popular online services that can be used for advocacy quickly with little to no technical support."
- How to organize an activist campaign via Facebook, by DigiActive [4]
- Ten online practical steps recommended to governments in support of democracy. Steven Clift
- Characteristics of Effective Activism
- Anonymous Blogging Guide: A step-by-step way to protecting your privacy and your safety
- Blog for a Cause: How to use blogs as advocacy tools for political and social change
- How To Communicate Securely in Repressive Environments. Patrick Meier: Core to effective strategic nonviolent action is the need to remain proactive and on the offensive; the rationale being that both the resistance movement and repressive regime have an equal amount of time allocated when the show-down begins. If the movement becomes idle at any point, this may give the regime the opportunity to regain the upper hand, or vice versa.
P2P Foundation
Blog entries at the P2P Foundation: please check the blog archive, for entries on the political aspects of P2P.
Here's a selection of a few articles:
- Four levels of P2P: the influence of P2P advances in stages: which ones?
- Peer Production and the State, and follow-up
- Is P2P left or right?, and follow-up
Long Citations
No social order ever perishes before all the productive forces for which there is room in it have developed; and new, higher relations of production never appear before the material conditions of their existence have matured in the womb of the old society itself. Therefore mankind always sets itself only such tasks as it can solve; since, looking at the matter more closely, it will always be found that the tasks itself arises only when the material conditions of its solution already exist or are at least in the process of formation.
- Karl Marx, Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy
The Constellation Method of Social Change
In spite of current ads and slogans, the world doesn't change one person at a time. It changes as networks of relationships form among people who discover they share a common cause and vision of what's possible.
- Margaret Wheatley and Deborah Freize [5]
McKenzie Wark on expressive politics
There can be no one book, no master thinker for these times. What is called for is a practice of combining heterogeneous modes of perception, thought and feeling, different styles of researching and writing, different kinds of connection to different readers, proliferation of information across different media, all practiced within a gift economy, expressing and elaborating differences, rather than broad-casting a dogma, a slogan, a critique or line. ⋅ ⋅ ⋅ This expressive politics does not seek to overthrow the state, or to reform its larger structures, or to preserve its structure so as to maintain an existing coalition of interests. It seeks to permeate existing states with a new state of existence. It spreads the seeds of an alternate practice of everyday life.
-McKenzie Wark. A Hacker Manifesto
David Snowden on idealistic vs. naturalistic sense-making
"In the idealistic approach, the leaders of an organization set out an ideal future state that they wish to achieve, identify the gap between the ideal and their perception of the present, and seek to close it. … Naturalistic approaches by contrast, seek to understand a sufficiency of the present in order to act to stimulate evolution of the system. Once such stimulation is made, monitoring of emergent patterns becomes a critical activity so that desired patterns can be supported and undesired patterns disrupted. The organization thus evolves to a future that was unknowable in advance, but is more contextually appropriate when discovered.” (Kurtz and David Snowden, Bramble Bushes in the Thicket)
William James on Meliorism
"meliorism treats salvation as neither inevitable nor impossible. It treats it as a possibility, which becomes more and more of a probability the more numerous the actual conditions of salvation become" (William James. Pragmatism. Harvard UP, 1975, p. 137)
"As meliorism takes as its goal to make things better through concerted effort, meliorism is a habit of mind and a mode of practice that aims for realistic optimism rather than passivity, pessimism, or nihilism" (Peter Lunenfeld [6])
Pessimism is a luxury we can only afford in good times
1.
"Pessimism is a luxury we can only afford in good times, in difficult times it easily represents a self-inflicted, self-fulfilling death sentence. This insight, to me, is real Realism or real Realpolitik, far from blue-eyed Idealism. We have to courageously resist the current tendency to suspect those who work for a better world to be hopeless idealists. This would mean Realpolitik letting disaster happen (by deepening fault lines instead of transcending them), and us not at least attempting to prevent this. Strange real Realpolitik!" (Evelin Lindner, 2004.)
"To be hopeful in bad times is not just foolishly romantic. It is based on the fact that human history is a history not only of cruelty, but also of compassion, sacrifice, courage, kindness. What we choose to emphasize in this complex history will determine our lives. If we see only the worst, it destroys our capacity to do something. If we remember those times and places - and there are so many - where people have behaved magnificently, this gives us the energy to act, and at least the possibility of sending this spinning top of a world in a different direction. And if we do act, in however small a way, we don't have to wait for some grand utopian future. The future is an infinite succession of presents, and to live now as we think human beings should live, in defiance of all that is bad around us, is itself a marvelous victory." (Howard Zinn, You Can't Be Neutral on a Moving Train: A personal history of our times, 2004, p. 208)
(both citations found here [7] )
2. Against the production of hopelessness
"Hopelessness isn't natural. It needs to be produced... the last thirty years have seen the construction of a vast bureaucratic apparatus for the creation and maintenance of hopelessness, a kind of giant machine that is designed to destroy any sense of possible alternative futures. At root is a veritable obsession on the part of the rulers of the world with ensuring that social movements cannot be seen to grow, to flourish, to propose alternatives, that those who challenge existing power arrangements can never, under any circumstances, be perceived to win... Economically, this apparatus is pure dead weight; all the guns, surveillance cameras, and propaganda engines are extraordinarily expensive and really produce nothing, and as a result, it's dragging the entire capitalist system down with it."
- David Graeber [8]
Mitch Kapor on Open Politics
"the whole concept of open and equal access to information could do wonders for our politics. Placing information in the open, allowing people to debate both general and very specific aspects of software, and then creating a process for decision-making about implementation could be very important lessons.... There are many other interesting aspects to the open source community that may very well help define new participatory processes that can help us revitalize our democracy."
- Mitch Kapor [9]
The New Power of Internet-organized Minorities
"The adage that organized minorities are more powerful than disorganized majorities is now more true than ever. However, as these organized minorities multiply and grow, they are challenging the very nature of what power is and how it will be maintained in our society. ... Self-organizing groups, and networks that tie these groups into powerful coalitions, are the new players. To alter Time magazine’s formulation, the Person of the Year isn’t “you,” it’s “us.”
- Andrew Rasiej and Micah Sifry [10]
Dale Carrico on an emergent technoprogressive politics
"The fact remains that there seems to me to be an exciting, vitally important emerging technoprogressive mainstream in the United States of America and across the planet knitting together what might initially have seemed to be disparate concerns into an ever more unified, ever more popular, ever more emancipatory movement, conjoining
(a) democratic and anti-authoritarian education, agitation, and organizing via peer-to-peer networked formations,
(b) research, funding, and institutionalization of decentralized and renewable energy provision,
(c) advocacy of universal informed nonduressed consensual recourse to emerging genetic and prosthetic medicines,
(d) championing universal education to promote critical, literary, scientific, and civic literacy,
(e) defending the right of women to avoid or end unwanted pregnancies as well as to make recourse to ARTs to facilitate wanted ones,
(f) circumventing technodevelopmental wealth concentration via automation, outsourcing, and crowdsourcing through the advocacy of a non-means-tested universal basic income guarantee,
(g) overturning militarist budgetary priorities, regulating the trade in and use of arms of all kinds, dismantling private armies and policing forces, repudiating the ongoing automation and abstraction of death-dealing, and
(h) turning the tide of confiscatory intellectual enclosure by encouraging access to free creative content through public subsidy of citizen participation in networks, universal public access requirements for research funded by the public, limiting current legal copyright terms, widening fair use provisions, radically circumscribing state, corporate, and academic practices of secrecy, and repudiating the legal fiction of corporate personhood." (http://amormundi.blogspot.com/2007/08/trouble-with-technocentricity.html)
Alex Foti on liberals and radicals
"A coalition of liberals and radicals is needed to defeat authoritarian nationalists and inegalitarian freemarketeers. Liberals without radicals turn into moderates, and radicals without liberals turn into fundamentalists."
Short Citations
Much of our modern thinking about rights is informed by an idea of sovereignty that emphasises autonomy rather than relatedness.
- Billy Matheson [11]
It takes a long time for change to happen quickly.
- Jon Husband, Wirearchy.com
A revolution doesn't happen when a society adopts new tools - it happens when it adopts new behaviours. [12]
- Clay Shirky
Resources
Key Articles
- Mark Pesce: The Power of the Cloud and the Cloud of Power
- This is related to my own, "integral" approach to P2P Theory (see [13] for background): "The claimed purpose of this project is to coordinate subjective (psychological, spiritual) and objective (social, political, economic) transformational imperatives into a coherent, non-ontological “counterproject.” [14]
- Of Syntheses and Surprises: Toward a Critical Integral Theory. By Daniel Gustav Anderson. [15]
- New Theses on Integral Micropolitics. By Daniel Gustav Anderson. [16]
- Tim O'Reilly, "The Four Pillars of an Open Civic System" (this typology of Open Civic Systems includes: Government to Citizen, Citizen to Government, Citizen to Citizen, and Government to Government)
- The Liberty of the Networked. Thoughtful essay by Tony Curzon Price on the liberty-phobic vs. liberty-genic effects of the internet. Part 1; Part 2
Key Blogs
- DigiActive: blog monitoring digital activism
- Digital Resistance research is monitored via the iRevolution blog
- Social Government: monitors (U.S.) moves towards Government 2.0
Key Books
- Clay Shirky: Here Comes Everybody: On the political implications of the hacker and free software movements:
- Jeffrey Juris. Networking Futures: The Movements Against Corporate Globalization. Duke University Press, 2008 [17]
- Netroots Rising. How a citizen army of bloggers and online activists is changing American politics. by Lowell Feld and Nate Wilcox. 2008
On the political implications of the free software and other open movements:
- Johan Soderbergh: Hacking Capitalism
- Decoding Liberation
- Christopher Kely. Two Bits, on the strategy of Recursive Publics
- Abstract Activism. Otto von Busch and Karl Palmås.
On Political and Social Change
- The Hacker Manifesto. McKenzie Wark.
- Massimo De Angelis: The Beginning of History. Value Struggles and Global Capital. Pluto, 2007: about the Commons as a political movement inaugurating a new era of history
- Cyber Marx. Nick Dyer-Whiteford.
- Gramsci is Dead. Richard Day.
- Code 2.0. Lawrence Lessig.
- Viral Spiral. David Bollier. An account of the emergence of the contemporary Commons movement
On power in networks (Protocollary Power):
- Protocol and The Exploit: How Control Exists after Decentralization. Alexander Galloway et al.
- David Grewal: Network Power, how standards come about in non-free ways
- Theory of Power. By Jack Vail.
Also, for academic audiences:
- Reformatting Politics: Information Technology and Global Civil Society. Editor: Jodi Dean, Jon W. Anderson, Geert Lovink. New York and London: Routledge, 2006
- The Politics of Cyberconflict. Athina Karatzogianni. New York: Routledge, 2006
- Information Politics on the Web. Richard Rogers. MIT Press 2004
Key Podcasts/Webcasts
Fuller list available here: Videos and tapes on internet politics
See the video: The New Change-Makers: An Introduction to Digital Activism
The effect of the internet on politics
- Andrew Rasiej on how Social Media are Transforming Democracy
- Clay Shirky on Collective Action through Social Networking
- Clay Shirky on Self-organized Online Cause Groups
- Clay Shirky on Social Networks and Politics
- David Weinberger on Blogs and U.S. Politics
- David Weinberger on the Web 2.0 for Politics
- Howard Rheingold on Smart Mobs for Democracy
- Jeffrey Juris on Networking Futures
- Jon Warnow on Open Source Activism
- Justin Oberman on Advocacy in the Mobile Age
- Mark Pesce on Hyperpolitics
- Marty Kearns on Netcentric Advocacy in a Socially Networked World
- Nicco Mele on the Impact of Web 2.0 on Politics
- Ricken Patel on Trends in Global e-Advocacy
- Robert Hackett on Networked Advocacy
The Obama Election
- Barak Obama on the Use of Social Media in his Electoral Campaign
- Bruce Bimber on the Internet in U.S. Elections
- Clay Shirky on Social Networks and the Obama Campaign
- Elisabeth and John Edwards on the Impact of the Internet on US Politics
- Henry Jenkins on the Role of Civic Media in the 2008 U.S. Presidential Election
- Jascha Franklin-Hodge on How Obama Really Did It
- Joe Trippi on Obama as Internet President
- Matt Bai on the Web and the Next U.S. President
- Paul Selker on the Obama Works Experience
Open Government
- Bill Allison and Greg Elin on Open Government Initiatives
- Ellen Miller on the Sunlight Foundation and Transparency in the Political Process
- Greg Elin on Open Data from the US Government
- Lawrence Lessig on Coding against Policy Corruption
- Lawrence Lessig on the Need for Open Politics
- Lawrence Lessig on using Openness against the Corruption of Politics
- Mark Elliot on the Participatory Consultation Process for the Future of Melbourne
- Mark Elliott on Stigmergy, Collaboration and Citizen Wikis
- Pete Ashdown on Open Source Politics
- Steven Lenos on e-Participation for Governments and Parliaments
- Tom Steinberg on Innovations in Online Activism at the MySociety Project
How To
- Ben Rahn on Online Political Fundraising
- David Taylor on Radical Web Designs for Social Activism
- Harald Katzmair on Developing and Implementing Social Network Campaign Strategies
- Heather Holdridge on Civic Online Campaigns
- Jonathan Cabiria on Virtual Environments for Social Justice
- Katrin Verclas on Using Mobile Phones for Social Change
- Liam Kirschner on Brilliant Swarms for Personal Transformation and Political Activism
- Todd Main on Effective Lobbying For Open Source
Key Resources
- Top 10 Social Action Platforms for 2008: also a list of runner's up
- Steven Clift monitors e-democracy initiatives, at http://www.publicus.net/e-government/
- A Spectrum of Politics and Governance Grounded in Empowered Citizen Dialogue and Deliberation, at http://www.communicationagents.com/tom_atlee/2005/07/04/a_spectrum_of_politics_and_governance_grounded_in_empowered_citizen_dialogue_and_deliberation.htm
- An initiative by R.U. Sirius et al. to define the ideal Open Source Political Toolkit
- Some tools for activists: Frontline SMS; Martus
- The following sites and resources are “insanely useful Web sites” for government transparency in the USA.
- Metagovernment keeps a list of Mixdemocracy projects, with combine elements of direct and representative democracy with the help of new technology at http://www.metagovernment.org/wiki/Related_projects
- A Global Map of Alternative Media, compiled by the Alternative Media Global Project
- Top 100 Networks for People Who Want to Change the World
- Web 2 0 Governance Policies and Best Practices: compilation of official documents from the U.S.
- DigiActive Guide to using Twitter for Activism
- Keele Guide to Political Resources on the Internet: amazingly comprehensive directory
Key Tags
Recommended Friendfeed Room: Peer-to-Peer Social Change
- P2P Governance [18]
- P2P Politics [19]
- P2P Activism [20]
- P2P Political Theory [21]
- P2P Warfare [22]
- Alterglobalization Movement [23]
- Internet Governance [24]
Recommended P2P Wiki Articles
- Civil Constitutions
- Civil Societarian approaches to politics
- the relational conception of the Common Good
- Subsidiarity
Recommended Thematic Issues of P2P News
- Multitudes, Issue 95 of P2P News, at http://integralvisioning.org/article.php?story=p2p95
- P2P Political Theory and Practice, Issue 93 of P2P News, at http://integralvisioning.org/article.php?story=p2p93
- Empire and Multitudes, Issue 92 of P2P News, at http://integralvisioning.org/article.php?story=p2p92
- Peer Governance, Issue 90 of P2P News, at http://integralvisioning.org/article.php?story=p2p90
- P2P and Cooperation, Issue 88 of P2P News, at http://integralvisioning.org/article.php?story=p2p88
- P2P Hierarchy Theory, Issue 87 of P2P News, at http://integralvisioning.org/article.php?story=p2p87
- On the Commons, Issue 77 of P2P News, at http://integralvisioning.org/article.php?story=p2p77
- P2P Cooperation and Activism, Issue 76 of P2P News, at http://integralvisioning.org/article.php?story=p2p76
Selected Wikipedia Articles
- Alterglobalisation, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alterglobalisation
- Free Software Movement, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_Software_Movement
- Free Software Movement, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_software_movement
- Open Source Movement, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_source_movement
- Public Domain, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_domain
- Smart Mobs, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smart_mobs
Pages in category "Politics"
The following 200 pages are in this category, out of 2,781 total.
(previous page) (next page)2
3
A
- Aaron Swartz on the Parpolity System
- Abolish Human Rentals
- Abstract Activism
- Accelerate
- Accelerationism
- Accelerationist Manifesto
- Actions Options Tool
- Actipedia
- Active Blogosphere
- Activism Without Leadership
- Activitism
- Ada Colau, Barcelona's New Mayor, on Spain's Political Revolution
- Additive Manufacturing as Global Remanufacturing of Politics
- Advent of Open Source Democracy and Wikipolitics
- Adversary Democracy
- Advocacy Networks
- Affective Labor
- Affective Strategies of Contemporary Capitalism, and the Resistance to and Transformation of Anxiety
- Affinity Politics
- African Traditions, Maker Communities and the Politics of Generative Justice
- After the Future
- Aftermath Network
- Against the Internet-Centric Totalizing Anti-Hierarchy and Anti-Centralization Ideology
- Agamben's Theory of Power
- Agency, Resistance, and Orders of Dissent in Contemporary Social Movements
- Agents of Alternatives
- Agonistic Politics
- Agorism
- Aktivdemokrati - Sweden
- Al Jazeera Documentary on the Indignants
- Alain Badiou on the Politics of Resistance
- Alasdair Roberts on the End of Protests
- Alchemergy
- Alchemy of Change
- Alex Foti
- Alexander Bard and Andrew Sweeny on the Exodus from the Old Empire
- Alexander Bard on Exodology
- Alexander Dugin About How Liberalism Organically Evolved Identitarian Illiberalism
- Alexander Galloway
- Alexander Galloway on Protocollary Power
- Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
- Algorithms as Regulatory Objects
- Algorithms of Capital
- Alignment Faking
- Alison Powell
- Alison Powell on Open Forms of Politics
- Allison Fine
- Alterglobalization Movement
- Alterglobalization Movement - Meshwork Aspects
- Alterglobalization Movement - Networked Aspects
- Altergrowth
- Altermodern
- Alternative Economics, Alternative Societies
- Alternative Futures of Globalisation
- Alternative Internet
- Alternative Internet Infrastructure
- Alternative Pathways in Science and Industry
- Alternativet
- Altroconsumo
- Alvaro Maz on Creating Platforms That Catalyse Citizen Oriented Change
- Amartya Sen on Justice
- Ambiguity of Open Government Concept
- America beyond Capitalism
- American Teen Sociality in Networked Publics
- Amine Ghrabi
- Amit Basole on the Knowledge Satyagraha People’s Knowledge Movement
- Amr Gharbeia on Lessons Learned from Social Networking in Egypt
- Amy Sample Ward on NetSquared
- An Xiao Mina on Internet Street Art and Social Change in China
- Ana Miranda
- Anacyclosis Institute
- Anarchism and the Promise of a Post-Capitalist Collaborative Commons
- Anarchist Cybernetics
- Anatomy of Revolution
- Anatomy of the Big Society
- Andrea Fumagalli on the Five Criteria To Distinguish a Progressive Interpretation of the Basic Income
- Andrea Goetzke
- Andreas Karitzis
- Andreas Niederberger on Constellational Citizenship and the Plurality of Means and Forms of Democratic Participation
- Andrew Hoppin
- Andrew McGettigan and Sean Rillo Racza on the University of Strategic Optimism
- Andrew Rasiej of the Personal Democracy Forum on how Technology is Changing Politics
- Andrew Rasiej on how Social Media are Transforming Democracy
- Andrew Rasiej on how Technology has changed Politics
- Aneesh Chopra and Tim O'Reilly on Open Government Infrastructures
- Anonymous
- Anonymous and the War on Scientology
- Anonymous Blogging
- Anonymous Party
- Another Future is Possible
- Antagonistic Conflict
- Antagonistic Usage of the Commons Concept
- Anthony McCann on Going Towards a Critical Vernacular Ecology
- Anthromodernism
- Anti-Authoritarianism - Philosophy
- Anti-Capitalism
- Anti-Capitalist Commons
- Anti-Capitalist Politics in the Time of COVID-19
- Anti-Credentialism
- Anti-Developmentalism
- Anti-Disinformation
- Anti-Hobbesian Trilogy
- Anti-Humanism
- Anti-Leaders in Social Movements
- Anti-Managerialist Movement
- Anti-Oppression Politics
- Anti-Politics
- Anti-Power
- Anticapitalism and Culture
- Antigoras
- Antisocial Notworking
- Any Cook Can Govern
- Apocaloptimism
- Appeal for Non-Hierarchic, Self-Determined, Social and Economic Alternatives
- Appeal to the Commons - France
- APRIL
- Arbeits Gruppe Commons Piraten Partei Deutschland
- Architecture of Resistance
- Architectures of Control
- Archon Fung
- Archon Fung on Transparency and Democratic Control
- Argentine Assembly Movement
- Ariel Saleh
- Army of Davids
- Arnold Schroder on Left Authoritarianism
- Arnold Schroder on the Difference Between Equality and Equity
- Arnold Schroder on the Three Ecological Strategies
- Art of Anonymous Activism
- Art of Being Many
- Arthit Suriyawongkul
- Artistic Activism During Long 20th Century
- Arusha Initiative for the Democratization of Money at the Global Scale
- Asian Cyberactivism
- Aspirational Commons
- AssangeDAO
- Assembly Democracy
- Assembly of the Commons
- Assertive Desertion
- Associationalism
- Associative Democracy
- Associative Economics
- Astroturfing
- Athenian Democracy
- Athina Karatzogianni on Wikipedia’s Impact on the Global Power-Knowledge Hierarchies
- Attraction of Activism from the Hacker Perspective
- Augmented Revolution
- August Black on GNU Linux and the Political Aspects of the Free Software Movement
- Autarchism
- Authenticity as Resistance Against the New Hegemonic Ideologies
- Authoritarian Deliberation
- Authoritarian Neoliberalism
- Authoritarian Populism
- Auto-Nomistic
- Autonomism
- Autonomous Politics and its Problems
- Autonomy
- Autonomy and Control in the Era of Post-Privacy
- Autonomy and Horizontalism in Argentina
- Autonomy and Self-Organization in the Revolutions of Everyday Life
- Autonomy Symposium
- Auzolan/es
- Avaaz Community Petitions
- Awareness-Based Collective Action
B
- Backcasting
- Background on the Icelandic Constitutional Assembly
- Balaji Srivanasan on the Three Competing Ideologies of the Networked World
- Baptist-Bootlegger Coalitions
- Barak Obama on the Use of Social Media in his Electoral Campaign
- Barcelona City Policies
- Barcelona en Comú
- BarCola
- Barefoot into Cyberspace
- Barry Effect
- Beehive Design Collective
- Beginning of History
- Ben Knight on How Technology Can Transform Democracy
- Ben Rahn on Online Political Fundraising
- Benjamin Barber on Why Mayors Should Rule the World
- Benjamin Studebaker, Michel Bauwens and O.G. Rose on the Revolutionary Subject in the Current Transition
- Berggruen Political Governance Index
- Beth Noveck on Open-Sourcing Government
- Beth Noveck on Transparent Government
- Better Left Unsaid
- Beyond Adversary Democracy