Somewhat redundant, as the wiki itself functions as a sort of collection of bookmarks. I guess this is where I put the bits and bobs I haven't made pages for yet, or which I feel like highlighting. Also needs a bit of reorganizing, as the categories overlap quite a lot and it isn't really clear where things belong.
Worker's cooperatives, philosophical foundations of politics, political theory, etc. If it's about collective action in some way, it's political.
Why Do Corporations Love Authoritarianism?: A Joan Westenberg article about how the structure of capitalism favors authoritarianism, and why corporations have historically, and always will, side with dictators.
The Counterculture Switch: A Baldur Bjarnason article about the mainstreaming of fascism and how one might continue creating in such an environment.
Hypha: Tech worker cooperative. Focused on decentralization and mobile and Web technologies, based on the work listed on their website.
Piracy is the Future of Culture: (Warning: PDF link.) A paper very much in line with my own suspicions about the future and the utility of piracy for the preservation of cultural artifacts.
Character
Anything concerned with growing as a person, one way or another. Neglecting this will result in a lot of energy spent making the world worse on accident. Overlaps with politics.
Malleable Systems: "Modern computing is far too rigid. Applications can only function in preset ways determined by some far away team. Software is trapped in hermetically sealed silos and is rewritten many times over rather than recomposed."
Solar Protocol: Routing requests to websites to solar-powered servers in parts of the world where the sun is currently shining.
POST GROWTH TOOLKIT: "The Post Growth Toolkit invites us to challenge the dominant narratives about growth and progress, and re-envision social metabolism through an understanding of the energy it requires, reconnecting human survival with the living, material qualities of the biosphere, drawing on ecofeminism, indigenous knowledge, environmental accounting and historical materialism."