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  2. Separatist movements of India - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Separatist_movements_of_India

    The United Liberation Front of Asom was formed in April 1979 to establish a sovereign state of Assam for the indigenous people of Assam through an armed struggle. The Government of India had banned the ULFA in 1990 and has officially labelled it as a terrorist group, whereas the US State Department lists it under "Other groups of concern". [120]

  3. Non-territorial autonomy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-territorial_autonomy

    Non-territorial autonomy is an umbrella term and highly contested concept, the meaning of which is interpreted differently by both researchers and practitioners. [1] This term has been used either as a synonym or as a connected term with several other concepts with a similar meaning, such as national personal autonomy, personal autonomy, national cultural autonomy, cultural autonomy ...

  4. Anarchism in India - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anarchism_in_India

    This means that they want to eliminate ... the state; private property. Singh was involved in the Hindustan Socialist Republican Association and Naujawan Bharat Sabha (Translated to 'Youth Society of India'). [18] [19] By the mid-1920s Singh began arming of the general population and organised people's militias against the British. From May ...

  5. List of autonomous areas by country - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_autonomous_areas...

    The autonomous areas differ from federal units and independent states in the sense that they, in relation to the majority of other sub-national territories in the same country, enjoy a special status including some legislative powers, within the state (for a detailed list of federated units, see federated state). [2]

  6. Neo-Luddism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neo-Luddism

    In the place of industrial capitalism, neo-Luddism prescribes small-scale agricultural communities such as those of the Amish and the Chipko movement in Nepal and India [5] as models for the future. Neo-Luddism denies the ability of any new technology to solve current problems, such as environmental degradation , [ 5 ] nuclear warfare and ...

  7. Stateless society - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stateless_society

    Evidence of the earliest known city-states has been found in ancient Mesopotamia around 3700 BCE, suggesting that the history of the state is less than 6,000 years old; thus, for most of the human prehistory the state did not exist. For 99.8 percent of human history people lived exclusively in autonomous bands and villages.

  8. Anarchy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anarchy

    In depicting the "state of nature" to be a free and equal society governed by natural law, Locke distinguished between society and the state. [29] He argued that, without established laws, such a society would be inherently unstable, which would make a limited government necessary in order to protect people's natural rights . [ 30 ]

  9. Anarcho-syndicalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anarcho-syndicalism

    Anarcho-syndicalists consider the state to be a result of class stratification, established and maintained in order to protect the monopoly of capitalists over the economy. As such, anarcho-syndicalists predict that the dissolution of the state will be an inevitable consequence of the abolition of capitalism.