User:Kootenayvolcano/WiP

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Articles I am working on:Kootenayvolcano (talk) 20:48, 13 April 2008 (UTC)

WHV[edit]

The Women's Hands and Voices project is an National Campus and Community Radio Association (NCRA) initiative designed to promote full and equal access for women in all areas of Community Radio in Canada.

in 2002 The project was designed to analyse and address the between men and women at campus and community radio stations in Canada http://www.ncra.ca/women/index.cfm and funded by Status of Women Canada A steering committee of women from across Canada acted as consultants for each aspect of the project. This steering committee was involved in a series of workshops held at the NCRC in Edmonton in June, 2004 http://www.ncra.ca/women/committee.cfm.

Surveys were circulated to women and staff members across the country and the results were compiled for this document http://www.ncra.ca/women/stratPlan.cfm.

Goals of the Project The overall goal is to encourage women to be involved in various capacities at campus and community stations, with the understanding that more empowered women at individual stations can result in broader changes on an organizational level and within the radio broadcasting and regulatory industry as a whole. As well, more gender-balanced news and music programming contributes to a radio environment free of stereotyping and misrepresentation http://www.ncra.ca/women/background.cfm. including volunteerism, on-air presence, paid staff positions, and national directives. program designed to support and enable the improved representation and increased participation of a diversity of women at campus and community radio stations across Canada http://www.ncra.ca/women/index.cfm.

2. A report (strategic plan) compiled by a researcher with the assistance of the steering committee and input from individual women and radio stations through surveys and interviews and information collected from the workshops.

3. A "toolkit" created by two consultants/specialists for use by stations in the presentation of gender-equitable programming.

4. Promotion of the project and distribution of the report, toolkit, and other materials created by the Steering Committee through this website, the media, online discussion and other means.

Periodical references[edit]

  • International Directory of Gay and Lesbian Periodicals (Oryx Press, 1987), ISBN 0897742974.
  • Lesbian Periodicals Index (1986), ISBN 0930044746.
  • Lesbian Sources: A Bibliography of Periodical Articles, 1970-1990 (1993), ISBN 0815307829.
  • Our Own Voices: A Directory of Lesbian and Gay Periodicals, 1890-1990: Including the Complete Holdings of the Canadian Gay Archives (Canadian Gay Archives, 1991), ISBN 0969098162.

Inkameep Day School Art Collection[edit]

Chris Bearchell[edit]

Grace Channer[edit]

Donna Allegra[edit]

WAVAW[edit]

Most Rape Crisis Centres, like Vancouver's WAVAW/RCC (Women Against Violence Against Women/Rape Crisis Centre) offer "rape victims support, accompaniment to court, information and advocacy services." (Ridington 1982:104)

Lesbians Against the Right[edit]

Akasha (Gloria) Hull[edit]

Trivia: A Journal of Ideas[edit]

devoted to attempts to articulate radical lesbian concepts of what is 'right' and 'wrong' for us. REF: Kitzinger/Perkins, changing our minds p68

Paula Martinac[edit]

(b. July 30, 1954) in Pittsburgh

Writer Paula Martinac's career has been devoted to exploring and documenting the place that lesbians occupy in society, history, and the family. Whether in her fiction, her syndicated column, or in a unique guidebook to gay historical sites, Martinac is always most interested in the ways in which lesbians affect and are affected by the society around them.

Martinac received her undergraduate degree from Chatham College in that city and went on to graduate school at the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia. After earning her M.A. in 1979, she took a job as assistant curator at the West Virginia State Museum in Charleston. Sponsor Message.

In 1982, she left West Virginia and moved to New Jersey to work as a production editor at the publishing firm Prentice Hall. That same year she joined the editorial collective for the New York City feminist newspaper, WomaNews. From then on, New York would be Martinac's city and the setting for many of her novels and short stories.

Martinac's work at WomaNews was the start of a long and productive involvement in women's publishing. In 1985, she went to work as production director at the Feminist Press at City University of New York. She worked on production at the Press until 1994 and after that continued to contribute as a freelance writer.

In 1988, Martinac joined the editorial board of the feminist literary magazine Conditions, which was published in Brooklyn. From 1990 to 1995, she co-chaired the board of directors of New York's Lesbian and Gay Community Services Center, where she established a lesbian and gay reading and writing series titled "In Our Own Write."

Meanwhile, Martinac began to publish her own work, beginning in 1989 with Voyages Out One: Lesbian Short Fiction, an anthology of stories written by Martinac and Carla Tomaso, another lesbian writer. That year she also edited another short story anthology, The One You Call Sister: New Women's Fiction, in which different writers, lesbian and straight, explore the unique connection between sisters.

In 1990, Martinac published her first novel, Out of Time, a fantasy romance that playfully explores the history of lesbian identity. Out of Time tells the story of a modern lesbian who is first mesmerized, then bewitched, by a photograph of lesbians from the 1920s that she finds in a scrapbook in an antique shop. The book was received well by critics and won the Lambda Literary Award in the category of best lesbian fiction of 1990.

Martinac has continued to publish prolifically. Her works not only include novels--such as Home Movies (1993), about a family's complex reaction to loss filtered through the memory of a lesbian novelist, and Chicken (1997), a comic novel about a forty-something ghost writer who embarks on affairs with two twenty-somethings after she is dumped by her lover--but also a variety of other books as well.

In k.d. lang (1996), a young adult biography of the lesbian chanteuse, she paints a compelling portrait for young readers of growing up lesbian.

In The Lesbian and Gay Book of Love and Marriage: Creating the Stories of Our Lives (1998), Martinac draws from her own experiences in a long-term committed relationship with her life-partner Katie Hogan, a writer and teacher, to explore the new frontier of gay marriage.

Martinac's fascination with the lesbian's place in history has provided inspiration for other books. In 1996, while working with the Lesbian and Gay Community Services Center, she compiled The Lesbian Almanac, which includes a wide range of lesbiana-- historical facts, quotes, and resources for lesbians and bisexual women.

In 1997, Martinac published The Queerest Places: A National Guide to Gay and Lesbian Historic Sites, a lively guide to U.S. locations of interest to queers everywhere, from the Texas birthplace of famed athlete Babe Didrikson to the Massachusetts home of the reclusive Emily Dickinson.

She has also become a sort of community historian in her home city of New York, and the June 2003 queer book expo, Pink Ink, featured several literary walks with Martinac, who guided walkers to queer sites of interest throughout the city.

Until recently, Martinac shared her humor, insight, and politics with readers in an immediate and regular way in her column "Lesbian Notions," which is syndicated in queer news journals throughout the country. The column was originated by Martinac in 1997; it is now written by veteran activist Libby Post.

Although Martinac no longer writes "Lesbian Notions" herself, in her position as Editor in Chief of Q Syndicate, the largest syndicator to the gay press, she edits the "Lesbian Notions" column.

Tina Gianoulis [4]

Latin American Lesbian Groups[edit]

http://fundaciontriangulo.es/direcciones/e_gruposlatinoamericanos.htm http://www.rimaweb.com.ar/safopiensa/direccionario.html

Woodwards Squat[edit]

Makara Magazine[edit]

The Pacific Women’s Graphic Arts Cooperative, in co-operation with Press Gang Publishers (a feminist press in Vancouver), produced Makara magazine from 1975 to 1978. The magazine was billed as "The Canadian magazine by women for people," and sought to explore alternatives to traditional journal structures and work toward positive social change. Makara is a general interest magazine that reflects a wide range of interests and philosophies, and contains fiction, articles, interviews and dialogue, features, and children’s section. The Co-operative, consisting of ten women, controlled the majority of production, with printing and four-colour layout done by Press Gang. Makara stopped publishing after 13 issues because it was not self-supporting; sales and advertising revenues did not cover printing costs or salaries. British Columbia Archival Union List

Sitka Housing Coop[edit]

women-only Sitka Housing Co-op at 1550 Woodland Dr [5]

Vancouver Lesbian Connection[edit]

April 1984, Cecill and four other women formed the Vancouver Lesbian Connection to create a political, service and social organization for lesbian and bisexual women in Vancouver. They encouraged and accepted support from non-lesbians and men. The Vancouver Lesbian Connection soon gave birth to the Vancouver Lesbian Centre at 876 Commercial Dr. 1984 Agreement: That if we share space with another group, the first priority would be another women's group as opposed to a gay male group.


By 1994, however, the centre was beginning to fall apart.

"After 10 years, I was the only surviving member and completely fried," says Cecill. "New people lasted about one year. The other original founders had been driven out. It was an ugly mess."

Another key organizer of The Lesbian Centre, Cynthia Brooke Harry Grunsky believes the Vancouver Lesbian Centre came undone over the women-born-women issue. Cecill was then a lone voice favouring the inclusion of transwomen. She remembers policy about SM being a huge point of controversy. [6]

Lesbian Feminist Critiques of Psychology[edit]

Onlywomen Press[edit]

Independent Lesbian Feminist publishers since 1974, London UK http://www.onlywomenpress.com/

Stolen Sisters[edit]

Stolen Sisters - A human rights response to discrimination and violence against Indigenous women in Canada - report highlighting the stories of missing and murdered indigenous women and girls in Cana http://www.stolensisters.com/ http://www.amnesty.ca/campaigns/sisters_overview.php longstanding patterns of social and economic inequity that remain unaddressed continue to drive Indigenous women and girls into situations like the sex trade where the risk to their lives is that much greater. It is time for action. All levels of government in Canada should work closely and urgently with Indigenous peoples’ organizations, and Indigenous women in particular, to institute plans of action to stop violence against Indigenous women. The following recommendations for action are based on recommendations made by the families of missing women, frontline organizations working for Indigenous women’s welfare and safety, and official government inquiries and commissions. Some of the recommendations are specific to the situation and needs of Indigenous women. Others are relevant to both Indigenous women and non-Indigenous women. Canadian officials should: 1. Identify and implement appropriate and effective protocols for action on missing person cases consistent with the specific risks to Indigenous women and girls. 2. Provide adequate, sustained, multi-year funding to culturally appropriate services, such as shelters and counselling for Indigenous women and girls, needed to prevent violence against Indigenous women. The design and implementation of these programs must be responsive to the needs of Indigenous women. 3. Expand programs which provide advocates to assist Indigenous people in their contacts with police and with courts. 4. Ensure that all police forces in Canada are subject to the jurisdiction of independent civilian bodies able to investigate allegations of wrongdoing by police. 5. Increase recruitment of Indigenous police officers, particularly Indigenous women. As well, ensure adequate training for all police, prosecutors and judges on issues of violence against Indigenous women in a range of settings including family violence, child sexual exploitation and violence against women in the sex trade. 6. As part of ongoing review and implementation of laws regarding the sex trade in Canada, give police clear instructions to ensure that the fundamental rights of women involved in the sex trade are protected in the course of all law enforcement activities

Provide funding for comprehensive national research on violence against Indigenous women, including the creation of a national registry to collect and analyze statistical information from all jurisdictions. 8. Request the United Nations’ Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights and fundamental freedoms of indigenous people and Special Rapporteur on violence against women, its causes and consequences, to jointly study and document patterns of violence against Indigenous women, including in Canada. Clearly outline the measures taken to address the problem of violence against Indigenous women in Canada in reports to relevant UN human rights bodies, including the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women, the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination and the Human Rights Committee. 9. Implement outstanding recommendations of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples which address poverty and social marginalization of Indigenous people in Canada, as has repeatedly been urged by United Nations human rights treaty bodies. 10. Strengthen and expand public education programs, including those within the formal school system, that acknowledge and address the history of dispossession and marginalization of Indigenous peoples and the present reality of racism in Canadian society. 11. Take measures to ensure mandatory and meaningful consultation with Indigenous women in the formulation and implementation of all policies affecting their welfare. 12. Ratify and uphold international human rights instruments relevant to the prevention of violence against women, including the Inter- American Convention on the Prevention, Punishment and Eradication of Violence against Women (Convention of Belém do Pará).

Lavender September[edit]

Amsterdam 1972

Asahi Tigers[edit]

Barbara MacDonald[edit]

Institute of Lesbian Studies[edit]

Palo Alto

Stepping Out of Line[edit]

Anti-Psychiatry Movement[edit]

Womyn's Braille Press[edit]

Cross Cultural Communication Centre[edit]

Sister Vision Press[edit]

'Sister Vision: Black Women and Women of Colour Press is a feminist press co-founded by Makeda Silvera and Stephanie Martin in Toronto, Ontario in 1984 to encourage the publication of "works by women of all cultures, sexual preferences & classes." REF: Sister Vision Press Statement of Purpose. leaflet, 1985 The organization was the first press for Black women and women of Colour to be established in Canada REF: Sister Vision pamphlet, 1985


In a 1996 interview with B.C. journalist Agnes Huang, cofounder Martin attributes the start of the press to a need to "address the issue of non-representation and lack of voice" of Black women and women of colour in Canada. REF Huang, Agnes, interview with Stephanie Martin & Makeda Silvera, Publishing is in our Blood, Kinesis: News about women that's not in the dailies, Feb, 1996, p10


Sister Vision has had a specific mandate to publish "innovative, challenging & provocative works by Black women, First Nations women, Asian women, and women of mixed racial heritage." REF Huang, Agnes, interview with Stephanie Martin & Makeda Silvera, Publishing is in our Blood, Kinesis: News about women that's not in the dailies, Feb, 1996, p10 To date the press has has published more than 50 books on many themes and issues including those which have traditionally been silenced, such as lesbianism.

Martin and Silvera list as some of their successes the many anthologies they have published which have provided space to a large cross-section of women who might otherwise never have been in print. Their book Piece of my heart : a lesbian of colour anthology was a finalist in the American Library Association Gay and Lesbian Book Award.

As their press has matured, their vision has been given renewed energy through collaborative work with feminist women's organizations in the Caribbean, Britain, Southern Africa, India and other countries as well as in North America. One such collaborative effort with CAFRA (Caribbean Association for Feminist Research and Action) of Trinidad and Tobago resulted in the publishing of Creation fire : a CAFRA anthology of Caribbean women poets (1990). This book brought the poetry of Caribbean women in the Caribbean and the Diaspora together and included all the languages of the Caribbean: English, French, Creole, Papiemento, Dutch, Spanish and others.

Black girl talk. -- Edited by the black girls. -- Toronto : Sister Vision, c1995. -- 157 p.

Mandiela, Ahdri Zhina. -- "Speshal rikwes." -- Toronto : Sister Vision, c1985. -- 60 p.

Maracle, Sylvia. -- Onkwehonwe-neha : "our ways." -- Toronto : Sister Vision Press, c1994. -- 23 p.

Miscegenation blues : voices of mixed race women. -- Edited by Carol Camper. -- Toronto : Sister Vision, c1994. -- 389 p.

Montague, Masanie. -- Dread culture : a rastawoman's story. -- Toronto : Sister Vision Press, c1994. -- 189 p.

Returning the gaze : essays on racism, feminism and politics. -- Edited by Himani Bannerji. -- Toronto : Sister Vision, c1993. -- 266 p.

"concious ploitical decision to distinguish between Black women and women of Colour, bc Blk w have had a particular historical experience in the world, the exp of slavery & it's aftermath."

Ariane Brunet

  • co-founded of the Urgent Action Fund (UAF), an international women's fund (1997).

(http://www.urgentactionfund.org)

  • created The Coalition for Women's Human Rights in Conflict Situations - to create precedents that recognise violence against women in conflict situations and help find ways to obtain justice for women survivors of sexual violence. (http://www.womensrightscoalition.org/)
  • She also coordinates the Rights & Democracy Women's rights programme

(http://www.wraf.ca)

  • has been active in ensuring that Canada took the lead on a resolution at the UN Human Rights Commission to appoint a Special Rapporteur on Violence against Women, its Causes and Consequences.
  • In 2004 she published "Where are the Girls?" on the situation of girl soldiers in Northern Uganda, Sierra Leone and Mozambique.
  • At R&D since 1990, Ms. Brunet was responsible for the Canada Programme and the Middle East and North African Programme, in addition to representing the Centre at the United Nations Human Rights Commission.
  • is an activist who was the Co-Director of the Third International Feminist Bookfair held in Montreal in 1988
  • opened l'Essentielle, the first trilingual feminist bookshop (closed 1991) also in Montreal in 1986.
  • She presently sits on the international advisory board of the Women's Initiatives for Gender Justice at the International Criminal Court.
  • Ariane Brunet is the Women's Rights Coordinator at Rights & Democracy (R&D), which she represents at the UN Human Rights Commission.
  • She contributed to the creation of a coalition that monitors gender-related crimes in Rwanda and Sierra Leone, and has been instrumental in setting up the Women's Rights in Afghanistan Fund.
  • She is a co-founder of the Urgent Action Fund (UAF), which both grants and initiates programs to equip women's human rights activists with the resources necessary to respond to women and girls brutalized in conflict situations.
  • member of the International Advisory Committee for the Women's International War Crimes Tribunal on Japan's Military Sexual Slavery. [7]
  • Founder of the Coalition on Women’s Human Rights in Conflict Situations and is the Co-founder of the Urgent Action Fund.
  • Coordinator of the Women’s Rights Program at Rights and Democracy in Montreal.
  • Coordinator of a Coalition project to monitor the work of the International War Crimes Tribunal for Rwanda on gender-based crimes against women.

She is the author of numerous articles and has contributed to many edited books on women, war, rights, and citizenship. [8]

In the view of Ariane Brunet and Stephanie Rousseau since "rape gives rise to and is accompanied by all sorts of physical and mental injuries" Eriksson, Maja Kirilova. Reproductive Freedom: In the Context of International Human Rights and Humanitarian Law, 2000, Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, ISBN:9041112499, p389


Montreal Principles[edit]

MONTRÉAL PRINCIPLES ON WOMEN’S ECONOMIC, SOCIAL AND CULTURAL RIGHTS The Montréal Principles were adopted at a meeting of experts held December 7 – 10, 2002 in Montréal, Canada. These principles are offered to guide the interpretation and implementation of the guarantees of non-discrimination and equal exercise and enjoyment of economic, social and cultural rights, found, inter alia, in Articles 3 and 2(2) of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, so that women can enjoy these rights fully and equally. The participants at the Montreal meeting were: Sneh Aurora, Fareda Banda, Reem Bahdi, Stephanie Berstein, Gwen Brodsky, Ariane Brunet, Christine Chinkin, Mary Shanthi Dairiam, Shelagh Day, Leilani Farha, Ruth Goba, Maria Soledad Garcia Muñoz, Sara Hossain, Lucie Lamarche, Marianne Mollmann, Dianne Otto, Karrisha Pillay, Inés Romero, and Alison Symington. They unanimously agreed on the following principles. A. A. I NTRODUCTION Sex or gender inequality is a problem experienced primarily by women. The systems and assumptions which cause women’s inequality in the enjoyment of economic social and cultural rights are often invisible because they are deeply embedded in social relations, both public and private, within all States. Acknowledging this systemic and entrenched discrimination is an essential step in implementing guarantees of non-discrimination and equality. The terms “gender” and “sex” should both be understood as referring to the range of economic, social, cultural, historical, political and biological constructions of norms of behaviour that are considered appropriate for women and men. Implicit in such an understanding of “gender” or “sex” relations is that male and female norms have been constructed so as to privilege men and disadvantage women. “Gender” and “sex” discrimination can be used interchangeably, and both “gender inequality” and “sex inequality” are used to refer to the disadvantaged position of women. In order to reflect this understanding of women’s disadvantage, the Montréal Principles use the terms “discrimination against women” and “women’s equality” wherever possible. Economic, social and cultural rights have a particular significance for women because as a group, women are disproportionately affected by poverty, and by social and cultural marginalization. Women’s poverty is a central manifestation, and a direct result of women’s lesser social, economic and political power. In turn, women’s poverty reinforces their subordination, and constrains their enjoyment of every other right. The UN Charter mandates universal respect for, and observance of all human rights, including the right of women to equal exercise and enjoyment of their economic social and cultural rights. 1 All regional and global instruments which set out economic social and cultural rights contain guarantees of non-discrimination and of equal enjoyment for women of these rights. 2 An expression of this global consensus is found in Articles 3 and 2(2) of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. In the political context of the early 21 st century, it is particularly important to underline this long- standing international consensus regarding human rights primacy. The lack of priority accorded to securing universal enjoyment of economic, social and cultural rights hurts women disproportionately. Women’s particular vulnerability to social and economic deprivation is deepened further in conflict and post-conflict situations and when economic sanctions are imposed. The Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights has stated that economic, social and cultural rights must be taken into account when imposing sanctions, and State Parties to the Covenant should take account of the suffering that such sanctions are likely to inflict on vulnerable groups, such as women. As the UN Security Council has recognized, peace and women’s equality are inextricably linked. 3 The inequality in the lives of women that is deeply embedded in history, tradition and culture 4 affects women’s access to and enjoyment of economic, social and cultural rights. To ensure women’s enjoyment of these rights, they must be implemented in a way that takes into account the context in which women live. For example, the traditional assignment to women and girls of the role of primary care-giver for children, older persons and the sick restricts women’s freedom of movement and consequently their access to paid employment and education. The economic and social devaluation of the work, paid and unpaid, that women traditionally do from a very young age, contributes further to fixing women in a position of economic and social inequality. These factors diminish women’s earning capacity and their economic autonomy, and contribute to the high rates of poverty among women worldwide. Traditional, historical, religious or cultural Montréal Principles on Women’s Economic, Social and Cultural Rights 2 Page 3 attitudes are also used to justify and perpetuate discrimination against women in the delivery of economic, social and cultural rights, including health services and education, by public and private agencies. Inequality in women’s enjoyment of economic, social and cultural rights contributes to their economic dependence, denial of personal autonomy and lack of empowerment. These in turn limit still further women’s ability to participate in public life, including fora for economic, social, political and legal policy and decision-making. As the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women has noted: “‘Policies developed and decisions made by men alone reflect only part of human experience and potential.’” 5 Such policies and decisions are less likely to take account of gendered consequences, and the economic and social factors that affect women’s lives. Economic, social and cultural rights and civil and political rights are particularly indivisible and interconnected in the lives of women: inequality in economic, social and cultural rights undermines women’s ability to enjoy their civil and political rights, which then limits their capacity to influence decision and policy-making in public life. Since “‘[a]ll human rights are universal, indivisible and interdependent and interrelated’” 6 equality in civil and political rights 7 is undermined unless equality in the exercise and enjoyment of economic, social and cultural rights is secured. It is especially important that women’s entitlement to equal enjoyment of economic, social and cultural rights is acknowledged and re-emphasized in the current climate of neo-liberalism and economic globalization. Policies of privatization, economic austerity and structural adjustment have negative impacts for women. 8 For example, women are often the hardest hit by eFor example, women are often the hardest hit by economic transition, financial crises and rising unemployment. In part, this is because women are relied upon to provide services that are cut such as caring for children, older persons and the sick, because women are often in insecure, part-time employment, they are commonly the first to lose their jobs. Furthermore, poverty can lead to a decrease in food intake among women and girls; girls are the first to drop out of schools; greater numbers of women are forced to migrate; and women are vulnerable to trafficking, violence and ill health. Economic and political insecurity provoke private and public backlash against women’s rights that may be expressed through violence and articulated in the form of defending cultures and traditions. To fully implement the rights set out in Articles 3 and 2(2) of the International Covenant on Economic Social and Cultural Rights, and similar guarantees in other human rights instruments, requires an understanding that focuses upon the subordination, stereotyping and structur disadvantage that women experience. It requires more than just formal legal recognition of Montréal Principles on Women’s Economic, Social and Cultural Rights 3 Page 4 equality between the sexes. It requires commitment by all responsible parties to take all necessary steps to address the actual material and social disadvantage of women. B. D EFINITION OF W OMEN ’ S E CONOMIC S OCIAL AND C ULTURAL R IGHTS 1. Women’s economic, social and cultural rights include, but are not lim An adequate standard of living including:  food and freedom from hunger;  water;  clothing;  housing and freedom from forced eviction;  continuous improvement of living conditions;

Squats[edit]

Austria

  • Ernst Kirchweger Haus (EKH) (Vienna)

Belgium

  • Scheld'Apen (Antwerp)
  • Alcahell (Ghent)

Brazil

  • Prestes Maia (São Paulo)

Canada

  • Chang Sang-Min Haus (Kingston)
  • Front St. Squat (Nelson) (evicted)
  • The Baldwin Street (punk house), 70 Baldwin Street (Toronto)
  • 20 Kensington (punk house) (Toronto)
  • Fort Goof (home of Bunchofuckingoofs), Kensington Market (Toronto)
  • Happy House (punk house) (Toronto)
  • Oxford Street Warehouse (home of politiKILL inCOREct) (Toronto)
  • Pope Squat (Toronto)
  • River Street (punk house) (Toronto)
  • ALF House (punk house) (Vancouver)
  • False Creek - tent city, early 2000's (Vancouver) (evicted)
  • Frances St. Squats- late 1980's/early 1990's six houses on Frances St. in the DTES (Vancouver) (evicted)
  • The Plaza (home of DOA) (Vancouver)
  • The White Belt House (punk house) (Vancouver)
  • BodyBag House (home of historic Canadian punk rock band BodyBag) (Vancouver)
  • Woodwards Squat (Vancouver) (evicted)
  • North Star Hotel- (Vancouver) (evicted)

The White House (punk house) Kitchener, Ontario

Czech Republic

  • Ladronka (evicted) (Czech Republic)
  • Milada (Czech Republic)
  • Stare Stresovice (evicted) (Czech Republic)

Denmark

  • Christiania (Copenhagen)
  • Ungdomshuset (Copenhagen)

Finland

  • Siperia (Helsinki)

France

  • Espace Autogéré des Tanneries (Dijon)
  • Alternation (Paris) (evicted)
  • Beluet
  • 59 Rivoli (Paris)
  • Intersquat (political squat) (Dijon)
  • Les Tanneries (Dijon)
  • Mandrak expo alternatif (art gallery) (Grenoble)
  • Squattalille (Lille)
  • Montreuil (Lille)
  • Lune des steppes (Lille)
  • L'Huilerie Occupée (Marseilles)
  • Collectif des Diables Bleus et de la breche, St.Roch (Nice)
  • L'Armature (Nimes)
  • Collectif de la Valette (une village ocupé), Chez Alléz (Nimes)
  • Alternation 2119 (art squat, evicted)(Paris)
  • Art et Toit (Paris)
  • BalTAZzart, 104 rue des Couronnes (Paris)
  • Ballastr, squatted building of SNCF (Paris)
  • Beluet (Paris)
  • Galleries Post Squat (ex Boliveart) (Paris)
  • Freeche en Ville, 7 rue pasteur, Saint-Quen (Paris)
  • Le Carrosse, 16 rue du Capitaine-Marchal (Paris)
  • La Cerise (ex-Squat 13)(Paris)
  • La Maison de la Plage (art squat) (Paris)
  • Le Barbizon (theater) (Paris)
  • La Fonderie de Bagnolet, east Paris (Paris)
  • Les Voutes (Paris)
  • O génie (art squat) (Paris)
  • Rivoli (art squat), 59 rue de Rivoli (Paris)
  • Tombe Issoire (Paris)
  • Une galette dans l'art (squart gallery), N9uf rue dauphine (Paris)
  • L'Espace Vert & La Marmite (Rennes)
  • Salut les minches! (Rennes)
  • Résistances & Alternatives à Rennes (Rennes)
  • Artettoit (art squat) (Vincennes)

Germany

  • Au (Frankfurt)
  • Bethanien (Berlin)
  • Drugstore (selbstorganisiertes JugendZentrum), Potsdamer Str. 180, Schöneberg (Berlin)
  • Duncker Straße (Berlin)
  • Eimer (Berlin)
  • Ex-Steffi (1997. – 2006.) (Karlsruhe)
  • Hafenstraße (1981. – 1992.), St. Pauli (Hamburg)
  • KTS (Kulturtreff in Selbstverwaltung, Konzert und Tagungsstätte) (Freiburg)
  • KULE, August Straße 10 (Berlin) (art house)
  • Kunst Haus Tacheles, Tacheles (Berlin)
  • Köpi (Berlin)
  • New Yorck59 in the Bethanien (Berlin)
  • Pleußmühle (Düren)
  • Rote Flora (1989)(Hamburg)
  • Yorck59 (1988. – 2005.), New Yorck59 (2005.)(Berlin)

Greece

  • Villa Amalia (Athens)
  • Tera Incognita (Thessalonica)
  • Fabrika Yfanet (Thessalonica)

Italy

  • Forte Guercio Occupato, via S. Giovanni Bosco 63 (Alessandria)
  • Subbuglio, piazza Santa Maria del Castello 9 (Alessandria)
  • Kontatto Falconara, via Andrea Costa (Ancona)
  • TNT, Jesi, via Politi (Ancona)
  • Antinebbia, S. Giovanni Valdarno (Arezzo)
  • Torrerossa, via Sardegna (Asti)
  • Aula occupata, università di Bari (Bari)
  • Coppola Rossa, Contrada Coppola Rossa, Adelfia (Bari)
  • Bassano del Grappa (Bari)
  • Stella Rossa, via Macello (Bari)
  • Battaglia Terme (Bari)
  • Emo Primo Della Lista (Bari)
  • Cayennautogestita, Feltre, via (Belluno)
  • Hangar Zone Feltre, piazza le Stazione (Belluno)
  • CSA Depistaggio, via Mustili (Benevento)
  • Villaggio Sociale, via cimitero 15 (Benevento)
  • Fantasma, via Legrenzi 2 (Bergamo)
  • Eta Beta, viale Lombardia 8/a, Redano (Bergamo)
  • Paci Paciana, via Grumello 61\c (Bergamo)
  • Atlantide (Bologna)
  • 36 Autogestito, via Zamboni 36 (Bologna)
  • Covo delle Guerriere, via Tanari Vecchia (Bologna)
  • Circolo Anarchico Berneri, Cassero di Porta S. Stefano (Bologna)
  • Ex-Mercato24 (Bologna)
  • Lab via della Torretta 23, sottoponte Libia (Bologna)
  • Lazzaretto, via del Lazzaretto (Bologna)
  • Livello 57, Piazza di Porta Mascarella (Bologna)
  • CSOA Riva Reno 122, via Riva Reno 122 (Bologna)
  • Teatro occupato, via Belle Arti (Bologna)
  • Babylon (Bra)
  • Magazzino 47, via Industriale (Brescia)
  • Mistrial (Brescia)
  • Contro l'emarginazione giovanile via Santa Chiara 6/8 (Brindisi)
  • Kollasso, via Betulla, parco Miraggio 167 Cinturano (Caserta)
  • Experia, via Plebiscito (Catania)
  • Auro, via S. Maria del Rosario (Catania)
  • Vulcano, piazza dell'Università (Catania)
  • Al Confino, via com. cervese 1817 (Cesena)
  • Ex Acquedotto, Stazione dei treni (Chioggia)
  • Gramna, Contrada Caricchio, via Guallupi 15 (Cosenza)
  • Filo Rosso (Spazio Sociale Occupato Autogestito), Università della Calabria (Cosenza)
  • La Finestra Dei Migranti, C.so Garibaldi 2 (Cosenza)
  • Dordoni, via Mantova (ex Foro Boario) (Cremona)
  • Gastone Dordoni, via Mantova (Cremona)
  • Kavarna Pozor Pivo, via Maffi 2/A (Cremona)
  • Intifada, via XXV Aprile, Ponte a Elsa (Empoli)
  • Cayenna, via Fusinato 4 (Feltre)
  • Dazdramir, viale Alfonso D'Este 13 (Ferrara)
  • Centro Popolare Autogestito Firenze Sud (1989.), via Villamagna 27a (Firenze)
  • DEA, via degli Alfani 43 (Firenze)
  • Ex-Emerson, via Niccolo da Tolentino (Firenze)
  • Indiano, piazzaletto dell'Indiano (Firenze)
  • La Baracca Scandicci (Firenze)
  • La Villa Okkupata, via Salvi Cristiani 2a (Firenze)
  • La Piscina (Foggia)
  • Baraonda (Genova)
  • Emiliano Zapata (CSOA), via Sampierdarena 36 (Genova)
  • Inmensa via Colano 1 Bolzaneto (Genova)
  • Pinelli (CSOA), via G. Adamoli (Genova)
  • Terra di Nessuno, via B. Bianco 4 genova (Genova)
  • Talpa e l'Orologio, La viale Matteotti 23 (Imperia)
  • Babilonia, via steria lungofiume cervo imperia Italia (Imperia)
  • Godzilla (Livorno)
  • Bussana Vecchia, Liguria, International Artists Village (Liguria)
  • CSA Casarano, Le Casarano, Zona Città Vecchia (Lecce)
  • Ragnatela/La, Maglie (Lecce)
  • Il Molino (Lugano)
  • Adrenaline, viale Gorizia 28 (Milano)
  • Area, Carugate (Milano)
  • Bakeka, Novate Milanese, via Cavour, 42 (Milano)
  • Breda37 (Milano)
  • Cascina, via Vaiano Valle 32 (Milano)
  • Cantiere/Il, via Omodeo 20 (Milano)
  • Chiapas, via Bondi 6 (Milano)
  • Cox 18, via Conchetta 18 (Milano)
  • Deposito Bulk Laboratorio (Milano)
  • Eterotopia, via Risorgimento 21 (Milano)
  • Garibaldi, corso Garibaldi 89/b (Milano)
  • Golaest, via Emilio Gola 8 (Milano)
  • Golgonooza Inc., via Riva di Trento 1 (Milano)
  • La Tribu' Peschiera Borromeo (Milano)
  • Laboratorio anarchico, via de Amicis 10 (Milano)
  • Leoncavallo (SPA), via Watteau 7 (Milano)
  • Mandragora, via Filippino Lippi 45 (Milano)
  • Micene, via Micene (Milano)
  • Panetteria Occupata, via Conte Rosso 20 (Milano)
  • Pergola Tribe, via della Pergola 5 (Milano)
  • Ponte della Ghisolfa, viale Monza 225 (Milano)
  • San'Antonio Rock Squat, via Garigliano 10 (Milano)
  • Sintesi Sociale, Seregno, piazza Risorgimento 33 (Milano)
  • S.Q.O.T.T. (CSOA), viale Bligny 22 (Milano)
  • Teknocasa, south Milan (Milano)
  • Torkiera, p. le Cimitero Maggiore (Milano)
  • Torricelli (Milano)
  • Transiti 28 via dei Transiti 28 (Milano)
  • Ubik ,Villa Casnati , via S. Carlo, Bussero (Milano)
  • Villa Okkupata, via Litta Modignani 66 (Milano)
  • Vittoria, viale Friuli (angolo via Muratori) (Milano)
  • XXII Aprile, via Emilia Ovest (Modena)
  • Scintilla, via Attiraglio 66 (Modena)
  • Lo Spettro (Montecatini)
  • Handala (Monfalcone)
  • DAMM (Naples)-DAMM (Diego Armando Maradona Montesanto, 1995.) quartiere Montesanto (Napoli)
  • Lavori in corso Acerra, quartiere Madonnelle (Napoli)
  • MOCO 16, case occupate via Monteoliveto 16 (Napoli)
  • Officina 99, via Carlo di Tocco 101, quartiere Gianturco (Napoli)
  • SKA (Laboratorio Occupato Sperimentazione Kultura Antagonista), calata Trinità (Napoli)
  • Maggiore 15, Pizza del Gesù (Napoli)
  • Studentato Occupato, via Sedile di Porto, Centro Storico (Napoli)
  • Tien A' Ment, Centro Sociale Popolare Occupato, via Piave Soccavo (Napoli)
  • Pedro, via Ticino 10 (Padova)
  • Emo primo della lista, Battaglia Terme, via De Gasperi (Padova)
  • La Corte, via marendole 7 monselice (Padova)
  • Gramigna (Padova)
  • ExCarcere (Palermo)
  • Montevergini, via Montevergini 20 (Palermo)
  • Barattolo, via dei Mille, 130 (Pavia)
  • Capitan Harlok. via del Cartone (Perugia)
  • Rosso Vivo (ex CIM), via Volturno (Perugia)
  • Città di Castello (ex Manicomio) (Perugia)
  • Oltre Frontiera, via Leoncavallo 15 (Pesaro)
  • Belfagor, Cascina MonteKuKKo Strada Agazzana (Piacenza)
  • Macchia Nera, Piazza san Michele (Pisa)
  • Gatanegra (Pordenone)
  • Spazio cultura, via Villanova (area Mercatone Z) (Pordenone)
  • CSA Spartaco (Ravenna)
  • Valtorto (Ravenna)
  • CSOA Cartella (Reggio Calabria)
  • L'asilo - Frascati (Roma)
  • 3njoy Pirateria, Circonvallazione Ostiense 9, Mercati Generali (Roma)
  • 32, via dei Volsci 32, San Lorenzo (Roma)
  • Astra occupato, Viale Ionio 209 (Roma)
  • Acrobax Project (Laboratorio Occupato Autogestito del Precariato Metropolitano - ex -Cinodromo), via della Vasca Navale 6 (Roma)
  • Astra 19 S.p.A. e-mail - via Capraia 19, Tufello (Roma)
  • Ateneo Occupato, via Ottone Fattiboni 1, Dragoncello (Roma)
  • Ateneo Libertario, via delle Averle (Roma)
  • L'Asilo - Frascati (Roma)
  • Bencivenga 15 Okkupato, via Bencivenga 15, Nomentano (Roma)
  • Blitz, via Meuccio Ruini 45 (Roma)
  • Brancaleone (1990.), via Levanna 11 (Roma)
  • Break Out , via Bernardo da Dibbiena 3, Primavalle (Roma)
  • Casa l’ Bernocchi "La Talpa", via Guido Brogi 21, Casal Bernocchi (Roma)
  • Casale Podere Rosa, via Diego Fabbri (Roma)
  • Corto Circuito, via Filippo Serafini 57, Lamaro (Roma)
  • El CHEntro Sociale TorBellaMonaca, Largo F. Mengaroni 11/25, Tor Bella Monaca (Roma)
  • Er Garage, via Tranfo, San Basilio (Roma)
  • Ex Casa del Popolo via di Valle Aurelia, 37 - Valle Aurelia (Roma)
  • Ex Snia Viscosa, via Prenestina 173, Pigneto (Roma)
  • Forte Prenestino, via Federico Delpino, Centocelle (Roma)
  • Garage/Il, via Gustavo Modena 92, Trastevere (Roma)
  • Hai Visto Quinto?, via Val Pellice 4, Montesacro (Roma)
  • Interzona, via Valle Aurelia 37 (Roma)
  • Intifada, via di Casalbruciato 15 (Roma)
  • Ipò - via del Giardino Vecchio, Marino (Roma)
  • L38 Squat/Laurentinokkupato (InfoShop), via Giuliotti 8, VI ponte (Roma)
  • Lab 00128 (ex Auro e Marco), via Caduti della Liberazione 268, Spinaceto (Roma)
  • Laurentinokkupato, via Giuliotti 8, sesto ponte (Roma)
  • La Maggiolina, via Bencivenga (Roma)
  • La Torre, via Bertero 13 (Roma)
  • La Strada, via Passino 24, Garbatella (Roma)
  • Macchia Rossa, via Pieve Fosciana 56/82, Magliana (Roma)
  • Obelix, via val Melaina 4 (Roma)
  • Ricomincio dal Faro, via Trullo 330 (Roma)
  • Rialto, via S. Ambrogio 4, Ghetto (Roma)
  • Spaziokamino, via Calenzana 7 (Ostia) (Roma)
  • Torre Maura Occupata, via delle Averle 100 (Roma)
  • Sans Papiers, Viale Carlo Felice, 69b, San Giovanni (Roma)
  • Spartaco, via Selinunte 57, Quadraro (Roma)
  • Spazio Sociale Occupato, ex 51, via Bacciarini 12, Valle Aurelia (Roma)
  • Strike S.p.A. (Spazio Pubblico Autogestito) via Partini, Portonaccio (Roma)
  • Vittorio Occupato, Lungomare Toscanelli 184, Ostia Lido (Roma)
  • Villaggio Globale (ex-Mattatoio), Lungotevere Testaccio (Roma)
  • Zona Rischio, via De Dominicis 4, Casalbertone (Roma)
  • ZK (Casa l’Palocco nuovo), via Epaminonda 7, Canale della lingua (Roma)
  • Samyr (Rovigo)
  • Eternit, via Oroboni (Rovigo)
  • Asilo Politico, zona Sud Est (Salerno)
  • Alterazione (Savona)
  • Citta Vekkia (Taranto)
  • Icaro, via de Filis 7a (Terni)
  • L' Albero Occupato, corso Regina Margerita (Torino)
  • L' Arco, strada Villaretto 187 (Torino)
  • Askatasuna c.s., corso Regina 135 (Torino)
  • Asilo Occupato, via Alessandria (Torino)
  • Barocchio Occupato, Strada del Barocchio 27, Grugliasco (Torino)
  • La Casa, c.so Pastrengo angolo Tampellini, Collegno (Torino)
  • Delta House, via Stradella 135 (Torino)
  • Gabrio, via Revello 5 (Torino)
  • Kinoz Occupato, via Giordano Bruno 148 (Torino)
  • Murazzi, Lungo Po Murazzi 25 (Torino)
  • Onda, Giardini di Piazza d'Armi (Torino)
  • Prinz Eugen, corso Principe Eugenio 26 (Torino)
  • El Paso occupato, via Passo Buole 47 (Torino)
  • Spackio, via Torino (Torino)
  • Aggro, Signoressa, Statale Feltrina (Treviso)
  • La Riva Autogestita, Valrovina di Bassano del Grappa (Treviso)
  • Treblinka, via Volturno (Udine)
  • Kinesis via Carducci 3 Tradate (Varese)
  • K.S.S. via Giuditta Pasta, Palazzo ex-Pretura, Saronno (Varese)
  • Morion, Salizada San Francesco 2951 (Venezia)
  • Rivolta PVC, Marghera, via Fratelli Bandiera (Venezia)
  • Aguaska (ex Caino), S.Donà di Piave, via Cima 11 (Venezia)
  • Lavorozero, Chioggia (Venezia)
  • Cà rosseria-zona 10, via Cà Marcello 12 (Venezia)
  • Pecora Nera (Verona)
  • Interzona (Verona)
  • La Sede, via Cattabrega 336 (Vigevano)
  • Ya Basta, via Btg. Framarin 5 (Vicenza)

Lithuania

  • Užupis

Mozambique

  • Grande Hotel Beira

The Netherlands

  • ADM (Amsterdam)
  • ASCII, (Amsterdam)
  • Africa (Amsterdam)
  • De Kantine in Vrankrijk (Amsterdam)
  • Kalenderpanden (Amsterdam) (evicted)
  • Martelaarsgracht (Amsterdam)
  • PS28 Rijkshemelvaart (Amsterdam)
  • Het Poortgebouw (still exists, but no longer a squat) (Amsterdam)
  • Ruigoord (Amsterdam)
  • Ruysdael (Amsterdam)
  • Het Slaakhuis (Amsterdam)
  • Fort Pannerden (Gelderland)
  • De Blauwe Aanslag (The Hague) (now evicted)

Breda

  • De Kraakkerk
  • Doornenburg
  • Fort Pannerden

Eindhoven

  • Trammeland

Groningen

  • Op Drift
  • Westinghouse

Katwijk

  • Boulevardwoning

Krommenie

  • Groote Weiver

Leiden

  • Uberfleks Multipleks
  • Vrijplaats Koppenhinksteeg
  • Vrijplaats Boerhaavelaan

Maastricht

  • Bourgonjestraat / Artspice B32
  • Landbouwbelang
  • Villa Sphinx
  • Villa Vendex

Nieuwegein

  • Intermezzo

Nijmegen

  • De Grote Broek

Rotterdam

  • Het Poortgebouw
  • Het Slaakhuis
  • Storm

Steenwijk

  • De Krakeling

Utrecht

  • Weggeefwinkel/PUSCII
  • Wageningen
  • Huize "Vrijstaete"
  • Kolkakkerweg-flat

Zwolle

  • De Oude Ambachtschool (DOAS)

Norway

  • Morgohjertasvei 23 (evicted) [12], Oslo
  • Blitz [13], Oslo
  • Hausmannsgate 40, 42 [14], Oslo
  • UFFA [15], Trondheim

Poland

  • Rozbrat, Poznań

Białystok

  • De Centrum (evicted in 2006)

Częstochowa

  • Elektromadonna (anarchist squat), ul. Warszawska 249/25

Gliwice

  • '13', Centrum Kultury Niezależnej, ul. Jana Śliwki 13

Poznań

  • Rozbrat, ul. Pulaskiego 21a

Sosnowiec

  • M9, ul. Mariacka 1 (Pogoń)

Warsaw

  • Fabryka
  • Elba, ul. Elbląska 2

Wrocław

  • Wagony
  • Freedom, Centrum Reanimacji Kultury, ul. Jagiellończyka 10d
  • Kromera, ul. Kromera 6a

Slovenia

  • etelkova, Ljubljana (a claimed free state in a former Yugoslav army garrison)
  • Tovarna Rog, Ljubljana

Spain

  • A squat in Viladecans (Spain)Kasa de la Muntanya, Barcelona
  • Can Cadenas, Barcelona
  • La Makabra, Barcelona
  • Can Masdeu, Barcelona
  • Cine Princesa, Barcelona
  • Plaza de Encarnacion, Sevilla

Barcelona

  • Centros Sociales
  • Can Cadenas
  • Can Vies
  • Can Masdeu
  • Cine Princesa
  • Cyberforat
  • Kasa de la Muntanya
  • La Òpera
  • La Makabra
  • Miles de viviendas
  • TDN
  • La Banka Rota

Granada

  • Camino de Ronda 190

Compostela

  • A Casa Encantada

Madrid

  • CSOA Amparao
  • Argumosa
  • CSOA Navalkejigo
  • CSOA El Desguace
  • CSOA David Castilla
  • CSOA Minuesa
  • CSOA Seco
  • CSOA El Laboratorio
  • Lavapiés 15
  • El Chino/Chinatown
  • El Laboratorio
  • Escalera Karacola
  • Fray Ceferino González 4
  • La Biblio
  • La Casika
  • La Escoba
  • La Nave
  • La Parra
  • La Perrera
  • Pelicano
  • Ronda Atocha

Málaga

  • Casa de Iniciativas 1.5

Santiago de Compostela

  • A Casa Encantada

Sevilla

  • CSOA Casas Viejas
  • Sin Nombre (C/san bernardo)
  • Plaza de la Encarnación

Valencia

  • Kasal Popular
  • Teatro Princesa
  • San Garcia de Ingelmos
  • El Otxo

Villages

  • Pontevedra
  • La Cavada
  • La Fraga-Baños

'León

  • A Noitiña-Sobredo (El Bierzo, member of FACC)
  • Mataveneros (free school)
  • Poibueno
  • Gipuzkoa
  • Bikunieta
  • Minas de Arditurri-Oiartzun
  • Nafarroa
  • Lakabe
  • Arizkuren
  • Huesca
  • Aineto
  • Artosilla
  • Ibort
  • Campol
  • Mipanas
  • Bergua
  • Morielo de San Pietro
  • Sasé
  • Girona
  • Mas Molar
  • Monars
  • Soria
  • Manzanares-Montejo de Tiermes
  • Abioncillo (squatted village school)
  • Guadalajara
  • Matallana
  • Alacant
  • La Mariola-Alcoi
  • Huelva
  • El Calabacino
  • Los Molinos

Málaga

  • Los Arenalejos-Alozaina (agro-collective)

Tenerife

  • El Cabrito

Badajoz

  • Las Adelfas
  • Villanueva de la Vera

Sweden

  • Ladonia
  • Mullvaden (evicted 1978)
  • Taråberg (evicted 1980)
  • Borgen (evicted)

Switzerland

  • The Chien Rouge in Lausanne, a squat held in the old hospital.Chien rouge, Lausanne
  • CSOA il Molino, Lugano
  • Rhino, Geneva
  • Kulturzentrum Reithalle, Bern
  • Cabaret Voltaire (Zürich) (now evicted) (art house 2002)
  • Hottingerstrasse (Zürich) (early 1990's- now evicted)
  • Konradstrasse (Zürich)(early 1990's in a former public sauna & spa- now evicted)
  • Rote Fabrik (Zürich) (Now a publicly funded art space/disco)
  • Wohlgroth (1991–1993) (Zürich) ex-biggest squat in Switzerland
  • Platten Straße, Zürich (now evicted) (art house 2004)

Bern

  • Kulturzentrum Reithalle

Biel

  • Autonomes Jugend Zentrum / Centre Autonome de Jeunesse

Geneva

  • Rhino

Lausanne

  • Chien Rouge (squatted old hospital)
  • Espace Autogéré, rue César-Roux 30

Luzern

  • Kiwiana, Fluhmattstrasse 63
  • Saint-Imier
  • Espace Noir (Cooperative, 1984.), Rue Francillon 29, Case Postale 94

Winterthur

  • Sidi

Zürich

  • Cabaret Voltaire (Zürich) (now evicted) (art house 2002)
  • Hottingerstrasse (early 1990's- now evicted)
  • Konradstrasse (early 1990's in a former public sauna & spa- now evicted)
  • Platten Straße, Zürich (now evicted) (art house 2004)
  • Rote Fabrik
  • Wohlgroth (1991–1993. ex-biggest squat in Switzerland)

United Kingdom

  • Principality of Sealand (on HM Fort Roughs, a wartime sea-fort)
  • The ARC, London (now evicted) (art house 1990)
  • A-Spire, Leeds
  • ASBO Community Centre [16], Nottingham (Squatted council housing turned into community centre)
  • RampART Social Centre, London
  • The Circle Community Centre [17] (a community center opened in November 2004 in London, now evicted)
  • The Nursery Occupied Social Centre [18], Birmingham (a squatted council day nursery transformed into a social centre. The collective left the building on their own terms in 2005, on the condition that the council return the building to social use)
  • The Cottage Occupied Social Centre [19], Birmingham (a squatted community youth centre shut by the city council. The collective along with local people are seeking to compel the council to re-instate the community/youth centre)
  • Medina House, Hove, Sussex
  • St Agnes Place, London (evicted 2005)

United States

  • ABC No Rio A social center founded in New York City by artists and activists in 1980.
  • C-Squat, New York City
  • People's Park, Berkeley, California [20] (1960s icon which epitomizes the notion of squatter's rights)
  • Zzyzx Mineral Springs and Health Spa (evicted 1974)
  • [Hippie Hill] San Francisco California

Atlanta, Georgia

  • Squaresville (punk house)

Baltimore, MD

  • Barclay House (punk house)

Berkeley, California

  • People's Park

Denver, Colorado

  • The Outpost (punk house)

Iowa City, Iowa

  • Theta Beta Potata (punk house), dobila ime po prethodnoj

Milwaukee, WI

  • Theta Beta Potata (punk house)

Newport, KY,Ohio

  • Southgate House (punk house)

New York City

  • ABC No Rio (1980.)
  • C-Squat, 155 Avenue C, Manhattan
  • Bullet Space (artists and musicians squat with a gallery), 292 East Third Street
  • Rainbow Co-op (Europe imigrants), 274 East 7th Street
  • Serenity (punk rock squat), 733 East 9th Street
  • Umbrella House, 21-23 Avenue C

Tallahassee, Florida

  • Charles Mansion (punk house)

Washington DC

  • Dischord House (home of the band Minor Threat)

West Philadelphia, PA

  • Cindergarden (home of Bull)
  • Paradise City (crust punk squat)

Squats_in_ex-Yu Ljubljana

  • Metelkova, (occupied former Yugoslav army garrison)
  • Tovarna Rog
  • Vila Mara Squat

Maribor

  • Pekarna

Pula

  • Karlo Rojc (occupied former Yugoslav army garrison)

Zagreb

  • Vila Kiseljak

Mostar

  • OKC Abrašević (ex-squat, now legalized)

Belgrade

  • Rebel House (evicted)
  • KUDRUC (evicted)

Babušnica

  • Punk house

Lesbian Feminist Circle[edit]

Circle (magazine) was a lesbian journal collectively produced by the Sisters for Homophile Equality (SHE) in Wellington, New Zealand between December 1973 and 1977. The magazine was renamed the Lesbian Feminist Circle in 1977, and continued to publish until 1986. ref Laurie, Alison J. (ed), Lesbian Studies in Aotearoa/New Zealand, Routledge, 2001, ISBN:1560232528, p XV, ref Covina, Gina. The Lesbian Reader; an Amazon Quarterly Anthology, Amazon Press, ASIN: B001MD9W7Q, 1975, pp 244-245. ref http://www.gaynz.net.nz/history/Part2.html

Circle, which was printed by Herstory Press, the country's first feminist and lesbian press, initially reprinted articles from international lesbian magazines, eventually the magazine's publishing collective began to write and collect historical, political and theoretical material with a New Zealand focus that was of interest to local lesbian feminists. ref Laurie, Alison J. (ed), Lesbian Studies in Aotearoa/New Zealand, Routledge, 2001, ISBN:1560232528, p XVI