Alan Albon
British anarchist and publisher
Alan Albon | |
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Born | 24 August 1921 Edmonton, London |
Died | 30 March 1989 (1989-03-31) (aged 67) Heathrow, London |
Political party | Independent Labor Party |
Alan Albon (24 August 1921 – 30 March 1989) was a British anarchist, pacifist and publisher. He was born in Edmonton on 24 August 1921 and died at Heathrow on 30 March 1989.[1]
Publishing
Early on in his career, he served as an editor and columnist for Freedom.[2] In 1984 he met with Marcus Christo and Richard Hunt to form a magazine entitled Green Anarchist.[2]
Politics
As a pacifist, he enjoyed a brief stint in the Independent Labour Party.[3]
See also
References
- ^ Nicolas Walter, Alan Albon: Radical and Lovable (Obituary), The Guardian, Thursday, May 25, 1989, p39 [1]
- ^ a b Connor, John (2004). "Two Decades of Disobedience: A retrospective on Green Anarchist's first twenty years". The Anarchist Library. Retrieved March 21, 2020.
- ^ Meltzer, Albert (1996). I Couldn't Paint Golden Angels. Edinburgh, Scotland: San Francisco, CA. p. Chapter 1. ISBN 1873176937.
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Freedom Press
- Anarchy
- Freedom
- Now
- Spain and the World
- War Commentary
- Anarchism and Anarcho-syndicalism
- Anarchy
- Anarchy in Action
- Alan Albon
- Marie Louise Berneri
- Richard Boston
- Tom Brown
- Thomas Cantwell
- George Cores
- Nora Dryhurst
- Leah Feldman
- Clifford Harper
- John Hewetson
- Thomas Keell
- Harry Kelly
- Peter Kropotkin
- Alfred Marsh
- Albert Meltzer
- Arthur Moyse
- Max Nettlau
- Vernon Richards
- Jack Robinson
- Donald Rooum
- Philip Sansom
- Rufus Segar
- John Turner
- Nicolas Walter
- Colin Ward
- Woolf Wess
- Charlotte Wilson
- Lilian Wolfe
- Freedom Defence Committee
- Wildcat
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