Reflections on Occupying

The Occupy Wall Street movement's emphasis on egalitarian decision making, mutual aid, and direct action originates in anarchist political practice even though most Occupiers are not anarchists and many hope to achieve a variety of liberal political reforms. Although the most immediate threats...

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Main Author: Dennis Fox
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ball State University Libraries 2011-10-01
Series:Journal for Social Action in Counseling and Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://openjournals.bsu.edu/jsacp/article/view/437
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author Dennis Fox
author_facet Dennis Fox
author_sort Dennis Fox
collection DOAJ
description The Occupy Wall Street movement's emphasis on egalitarian decision making, mutual aid, and direct action originates in anarchist political practice even though most Occupiers are not anarchists and many hope to achieve a variety of liberal political reforms. Although the most immediate threats to Occupy are police repression and the stresses of winter, a more substantive threat is internal divisiveness over goals, tactics, and process as the movement responds inconsistently to external pressure and internal strain. A critical psychologist reflects on his experiences in the early stages of the movement in Boston and Florida, where he taught on-site classes designed to encourage appreciation of, and support for, radical rather than reformist goals.
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spelling doaj-art-e239dfe207284f09a5d08554c1c01e9a2025-08-20T03:16:21ZengBall State University LibrariesJournal for Social Action in Counseling and Psychology2159-81422011-10-013210.33043/JSACP.3.2.129-137Reflections on OccupyingDennis FoxThe Occupy Wall Street movement's emphasis on egalitarian decision making, mutual aid, and direct action originates in anarchist political practice even though most Occupiers are not anarchists and many hope to achieve a variety of liberal political reforms. Although the most immediate threats to Occupy are police repression and the stresses of winter, a more substantive threat is internal divisiveness over goals, tactics, and process as the movement responds inconsistently to external pressure and internal strain. A critical psychologist reflects on his experiences in the early stages of the movement in Boston and Florida, where he taught on-site classes designed to encourage appreciation of, and support for, radical rather than reformist goals.https://openjournals.bsu.edu/jsacp/article/view/437OccupyActivismAnarchismOrganizing
spellingShingle Dennis Fox
Reflections on Occupying
Journal for Social Action in Counseling and Psychology
Occupy
Activism
Anarchism
Organizing
title Reflections on Occupying
title_full Reflections on Occupying
title_fullStr Reflections on Occupying
title_full_unstemmed Reflections on Occupying
title_short Reflections on Occupying
title_sort reflections on occupying
topic Occupy
Activism
Anarchism
Organizing
url https://openjournals.bsu.edu/jsacp/article/view/437
work_keys_str_mv AT dennisfox reflectionsonoccupying