Metadata
Title
Facilitating grassroots activism
Category
general
UUID
b35fc19fc4d445e0b27ac64e317a200d
Source URL
https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/anarchist-constitutionalising/
Parent URL
https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/
Crawl Time
2026-03-24T00:02:39+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Facilitating grassroots activism

Source: https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/anarchist-constitutionalising/ Parent: https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/

Improving decision making practices by promoting anarchist principles

It is generally held that anarchists reject law and the state and have little regard for constitutional practices.

Our research – spanning more than 20 years – has demonstrated that this is not the case. Professor Kinna has revealed that anarchists have developed novel and complex constitutional practices. These are often not fully recognised by activists and this lack of appreciation can undermine group cohesion and morale.

Working with a range of activist organisations, Kinna has been able to participate in reviews of existing constitutions and share best practice to improve group working and decision making.

Image courtesy of Anarchy Rules

Our impact

Anarchic Agreements

Anarchic Agreements - on film

Alex Prichard and Ruth Kinna discuss anarchist constitutional politics

The research

Professor Kinna’s study of the anarchist constitutional tradition has flagged four key elements common to most constitutions: the declaration of principles, the establishment of institutions, the adoption of decision-making procedures, and rule-making processes.

However - to guard against the tendency of power to corrupt - the anarchist model has no single point of authority. All elements of the constitution are flexible. Constitutions become constitutionalising processes, changeable as organisations evolve.

Working with three organisations – Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), Radical Routes (RR) and Seeds for Change (SfC) – Kinna’s findings have supported constructive constitutional review processes and seen the publication of two pamphlets:

They have been distributed widely in hard copy and online to raise awareness and understanding across international campaign groups about the efficacy of the anarchist constitutional model.

As a result, social centres, farmers and volunteer-groups worldwide – that do not necessarily identify as anarchist – are now using them to change their practices and enhance their activity.

### Kinna's anarchism - a beginner’s guide is available as a free download

### Kinna's The Government of No One was published by Pelican in 2020

Research funders

Development partners

Meet the experts

Professor Ruth Kinna

Professor of Political Theory