Anarchist Youth Network

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The Anarchist Youth Network (AYN) was a loosely-organised anarchist network, supposed to be based in Britain and Ireland. Lasting only from 2002 to 2004, it suffered many of the weaknesses common in the contemporary anarchist movement of the English speaking world.

Contents

[edit] Birth

Founded in London in 2002 by two members of the Anarchist Federation on the back of the anticapitalist movement it became the UK's fastest-growing anarchist organisation.

In London by late 2003 the group began having fortnightly meetings of up to 40 people and elsewhere groups sprung up:

Area: number of people involved Bristol: 3-4 people Essex: 3-4 people Herefordshire: 3-4 Manchester: 6-12 North East: 2-3 Stroud Valleys: 2-3 Surrey: 5-7 Swindon: 2-4 West Midlands: 4-6 Worthing: 2-4

[edit] Decline

The group was floundering, however since very few of those involved had any clue what to do to change the world. Individualist anarchist ideas were common, and anti-theory sentiment was common. There was little class struggle basis to the group, and so no common strategy.

An attempt was made to organise a network of anarchist students, which got contacts at the following campuses:

University name, group name if present

University of Bristol University of Birmingham Cambridge University, Anti-Capitalist Action Cardiff University, Alt&Shift University of East Anglia, Norwich Anarchist Students Keele University Oxford University, OSAN

London Goldsmiths College, Goldsmiths Anarchist Society London School of Economics Royal Holloway School of African and Oriental Studies, London University College London, M12 Collective

However this was a last-gasp attempt to find direction, and it failed.

[edit] The end, and beyond

The London group split into two principle factions - class struggle anarchists, and those who could loosely be described as having affinity with post-left anarchy. The latter became the Black Star Collective and became involved in squatting autonomous social centres before dissolving into other groups (such as In Arms Reach). The former became the enrager.net web collective, later the libcom group, running the libcom.org website. The majority of the London AYN group simply drifted away, as did many of the other groups.

AYN was mostly a social network for anti-capitalist and anti-authoritarian alternative kids. Despite a lot of internet discussion on email lists, message boards and even an IRC chatroom, and despite a lot of meetings, gatherings and small scale actions, without a theoretical focus and an understanding of the class nature of capitalism, AYN was doomed to repeat the failures of the Anarchist Youth Federation of the 1980s which followed a similar fate.

It finally fizzled out in mid-2004.

[edit] External links