revolutionary manifestos, documents, and declarations

a growing resource guide to internationalist, abolitionist, marxist, feminist (etc.), manifestos, declarations, goals, and statements.

 

The Communist Manifesto, originally the Manifesto of the Communist Party, is an 1848 pamphlet by German philosophers and political economists Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels - would go on to influence many international revolutionaries including Assata Shakur, Huey P. Newton, Che Guevara, etc.

The Revolutionary Action Movement became a study/action group that hoped to turn the Civil Rights Movement into a worldwide black revolution. This is the manifesto, platform, and program they published in 1964.

The Ten-Point Program of the BPP was a set of guidelines to the Black Panther Party and states their ideals and ways of operation, a "combination of the Bill of Rights and the Declaration of Independence."

A statement released on November 3rd 1970 by those incarcerated at Folsom State Prison.

The Attica Prison Rebellion, also known as the Attica Prison Massacre, Attica Uprising or Attica Prison Riot, was the bloodiest prison riot in United States history and is one of the best-known and most significant flashpoints of the prisoners' rights movement.

A document related to the 1972 cross-country caravan of American Indian and First Nations organizations that started on the West Coast of the United States and ended at the Department of Interior headquarters building at the US capital of Washington DC.

The Combahee River Collective statement was created and written by black feminists who parted ways from the NBFO (National Black Feminist Organization) in order to create, define, and clarify their own politics.

The platform released in 1970 by Chicago based revolutionary group that aimed to fight for neighborhood empowerment and self-determination for Puerto Rico, Latinos, and colonized ("Third World") people.

A declaration from the mountains of the Mexican Southeast written by the Clandestine Revolutionary Indigenous Committee in 2005.

a manifesto written and distributed by the folks at aworldwithoutpolice.org in 2016, re-formatted here as a part of an effort to make abolition education materials more accessible, searchable, and shareable.