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Issue 360

Thoughts on Freedom
Putting anarchy to the test

Front Page
News Headlines

Somaliland Leader Accorded Warm Welcome On Arrival In Djibouti

Chasing Pirates Onto Somali Territory Gets Approval From UN  
Abdillahi Yusuf Given Two Weeks Notice

Arms Embargo On Somalia 'Constantly Broken'

Puntland Considers Banning Ethiopian And Kenyan Kat

UNHCR Seeks $92m To Build Somali Refugee Camps

Local and Regional Affairs

Somaliland Offers Port To Fight Pirates

"Somaliland To Be Recognized In The Near Future," Says Ethiopian Former Ambassador

American Fugitive Roams Free Under US Task Force In The Horn Of Africa

German Parliament Approves Anti-Pirate Mission

Human Rights Watch Urges Accountability, Reassessment Of Somalia Priorities

Local Somali Leaders Check For Terror Connections

Some point finger at Jamal over reports on missing Somali men

Security Council Empowers Anti-Piracy Operations On Land In Somalia

Broadcaster Silenced In Islamist-Held City
U.S. Condemns Dispute Among TFG Leadership
Book Review

Fixing Fragile States: New Paradigm For Development

Editor's Choice

Last Domino Standing: On The Fate Of Somaliland

Somebody Is Giving Somali Pirates State-Level Intelligence Information

Features & Commentry

Political Solution Is Needed To Horn Of Africa Piracy

Somalia: Warlords, Pirates and the Politics of Morass
Somalia Nearing Disaster
The Pirates’ Prima Donna

What's It Like To Be A Pirate? In Dirt-Poor Somalia, Pretty Good

Statement on Somaliland’s Progress Towards Consolidation of Democracy Made at the European Parliament

Chinese Ship Fights Somalian Pirates With Beer Bottles

International News
 
Crude Oil Falls Below $40 on OPEC Skepticism, U.S. Supply Gain

Brazilian And Somali Environmentalists Win 2008 National Geographic Award For Conservation

‘Denmark: Somalis Leaving To Fight In Somalia

President Kibaki Urged Not To Sign Draconian Media Bill Into Law

U.S. Takes Backseat in Battle Against Somali Pirates

Atrocity Unlimited: US Seeks To Turn Somalia Into Global Free-Fire Zone

Opinion

Somalia – The End Game
Serious Political Constraints In Somaliland
Somalia: A Glance At The Religious Groups

BBC Somali Service: From News Provider To Another Political Opponent In Somali Affairs

Al-Shabab Of Somalia – A Danger To All

Vultures Gather Again For Carrion...!!!

The Mumbai Attacks Call For A Collective Muslim Outrage

Australian Libertarian Society Blog

Most libertarians believe that we should have a small government, which is limited to core activities of law & order, some public goods, and perhaps a dash of welfare. Minarchists remove the public goods & welfare from their list. But a small minority of libertarians go further and want to privatize law & order. These are the anarchists.

Anarchy does not mean chaos. Anarchy is the lack of a government. Chaos is when people run around burning cars (Paris) and throwing rocks (Bangkok).

Non-anarchists object that anarchy is not viable, as only the government can provide sufficient law & order. Anarchists respond with a bunch of theories for how a society could coordinate its security requirements without government. The argument is interesting, but mostly theoretical.

We need to put anarchy to the test.

There are several examples we could use. David Friedman likes to talk about Iceland around 1000AD, which maintained a governmentless and relatively peaceful existence for a few centuries. Others like to mention the recent trails & tribulations of Somaliland (north Somalia), which has seen some advances and some setbacks over their past three decades of weak (or no) government.

But one of the best places to look for evidence on anarchy is the American west. In the mid 19th century American settlers were building communities outside the reach of the American government in what came to be known as the “wild west”. But as Anderson & Hill pointed out back in 1979, the pseudo-anarchist west was not so wild.

Their conclusions are:

1) The West, although often dependent upon market peace keeping agencies, was, for the most part, orderly.

2) Different standards of justice did prevail and various preferences for rules were expressed through the market place.

3) Competition in defending and adjudicating rights does have beneficial effects. Market agencies provided useful ways of measuring the efficiency of government alternatives. The fact that government’s monopoly on coercion was not taken as seriously as at present meant that when that monopoly was poorly used market alternatives arose. Even when these market alternatives did become “governments” in the sense of having a virtual monopoly on coercion, the fact that such firms were usually quite small provided significant checks on their behavior. Clients could leave or originate protective agencies on their own. Without formal legal sanctions, the private agencies did face a “market test” and the rate of survival of such agencies was much less than under government.



 



 
















 

 


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