Ruth Kinna teaches at Loughborough University, UK. She has published numerous books on anarchism, historical and contemporary, and is a contributor to PM Press's Mutual Aid: An Illuminated Factor of Evolution. She is co-editor of Libertarian Socialism: Politics in Black and Red, also published by PM Press. Alex Prichard teaches International Relations at the University of Exeter (UK). He has published widely on international political thought of Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, most recently a new translation of his 1861 work War and Peace. He is also the author of the new edition of the Oxford University Press's Anarchism: A Very Short Introduction. Thomas Swann teaches philosophy at Loughborough University, UK. His book Anarchist Cybernetics: Control and Communication in Radical Politics was published in 2020. He is also co-editor of Anarchism, Organization and Management, a book that introduces anarchism to business school students. Seeds for Change is a workers' co-op of experienced campaigners and co-operators. It offers training, facilitation, online resources and other support for campaigns, community groups and co-operatives. It provides free-to-use resources on campaigning, facilitation and workshops. They are the author of A Consensus Handbook: Co-operative decision-making for activists, co-ops and communities.
""Anarchic Agreements is a kind of how-to offering about something not often codified at all, much less with systematic and comprehensive care--forming effective groups, and then, groups of groups, consistently with anarchist aspirations and insights. It addresses the nitty gritty of working well together, a focus that everyone who wants a better world ought to prioritize."" --Michael Albert ""I've been using the tools and principles in the Anarchic Agreements pamphlets--here at last as one book, with more besides--since 2017. The book works with campaign groups, charities, housing co-ops, worker's co-ops and all sorts of organisations and committees with an aspiration to be less hierarchical or to work better with volunteers. Making agreements that are consensual, changeable and conscious is the keystone for making groups that last. It can also be a tonic for groups that have gone stale, inherited old rules or need a new shared vocabulary to move from a vision of the future to the real thing."" --Jed Picksley, community organiser, trainer, activist, and permaculturist ""Informed and informative, this is a rare and much needed response to the often simplistic approaches to anarchist organising. For every piece of practical advice useful to organisers, there's an equally valuable reflection on the complexities of working together without hierarchies. I couldn't recommend this more highly for newcomers to horizontal organising--and I'd make the case that it should be mandatory reading for anarchist veterans!"" --Matthew Wilson, author of Rules Without Rulers