This is a 24-mark Paper 2 Section B ideology essay, marked AO1 (8), AO2 (8), AO3 (8). It tests whether the anarchist vision can actually work, drawing directly on the specification's treatment of anarchism as utopian.
The mark scheme rewards strand and thinker analysis. Real-world episodes (Catalonia, the Zapatistas, syndicalist unions) are legitimate illustration, but the analytical core is the thinkers and the strands.
The strongest line of argument is NO, NOT TO A LARGE EXTENT - an anarchist society is not achievable in modern conditions. The strands cannot agree what the society even is, the scale of modern life defeats stateless coordination, and the historical record is of small or short-lived experiments. The vision informs real movements but does not deliver a stateless society.
Each named thinker offers both a picture of the future society and a route to it. The disagreement on the route is itself evidence against achievability.
| Thinker | Vision of the future society | Route |
|---|---|---|
| Max Stirner | The Union of Egoists - a voluntary association serving each ego, no common ownership. | Insurrection - individuals withdraw their consent, rather than overthrowing the state. |
| Pierre-Joseph Proudhon | Mutualism - independent producers exchanging fairly, no private property in the capitalist sense. | Peaceful - the state is rejected and dissolved gradually, not by violent revolution. |
| Mikhail Bakunin | Collectivisation - common ownership and a federation of communes. | Propaganda by the deed - dramatic acts spark mass revolution; the state is abolished. |
| Peter Kropotkin | Anarcho-communism - common ownership, distribution by need, a utopian commune. | Revolution to abolish the state and private property. |
| Emma Goldman | A free society of autonomous individuals in cooperative community. | Revolution, not reform - all participation in the existing state is corrupting and futile. |
Take the strongest version of the optimistic case before refuting it.
Kropotkin's Mutual Aid (1902) argues that cooperation is a real and observable feature of human and animal life - so stateless cooperation is not a fantasy but an extension of something that already exists. The principle that anarchy is order claims that order does not need to be imposed; it emerges spontaneously.
There are real episodes to point to. Revolutionary Catalonia in 1936 saw the anarcho-syndicalist CNT run collectivised farms and factories during the Spanish Civil War. Anarcho-syndicalist unions, worker cooperatives and consensus-based movements all show stateless organisation working in part. Contemporary examples such as the Zapatistas in Chiapas and the autonomous administration in Rojava are often cited as anarchist-influenced self-government.
Now the substantive case for the line of argument.
The deepest problem for achievability is that there is no single "anarchist society" to achieve.
The collectivist strands - Kropotkin's anarcho-communism, Proudhon's mutualism, anarcho-syndicalism - want common or collective ownership. The individualist strand wants the opposite: Stirner's Union of Egoists has no common ownership and no shared duty, and anarcho-capitalism wants an unregulated market. These are not variations on one society; they are incompatible societies.
A vision that its own supporters cannot define in common is harder to call achievable. Any actual attempt would have to choose one strand, and in doing so would be rejected by the others as not anarchist at all.
Even granting a shared goal, anarchists divide on how to reach it - and each route has a weakness.
Bakunin (propaganda by the deed), Kropotkin and Goldman (revolution, not reform) all reject working through the existing state. But a revolution that destroys the state leaves the coordination and defence problems unsolved the morning after.
Proudhon wants the state rejected and dissolved by peaceful means. But there is no historical case of a modern state peacefully dissolving itself into mutualist federation.
Stirner's insurrection - individuals simply withdrawing consent - has never scaled beyond the individual. It is a stance, not a strategy for a whole society.
The line of argument is NO, NOT TO A LARGE EXTENT. An anarchist society is not achievable in modern conditions.
The fair concession is that mutual aid is real and stateless organisation has worked at small scale - the principle is not nonsense. But that is a long way from a whole modern society. Commit to: not achievable to a large extent, with the anarchist vision functioning as a critique of the state and an influence on real movements rather than as a deliverable blueprint.