1. Ecology
1.1. Radical environmentalism
1.1.1. Deep ecology
1.1.1.1. Primitivism
1.1.2. Radical degrowth
1.1.3. Direct action
1.2. Mainstream environmentalism
1.2.1. Rebound effect
1.2.2. Green capitalism
1.2.3. Sustainable development
1.3. Permaculture
1.3.1. Veganic permaculture
1.4. Ecological ethics
1.4.1. Anthropocentrism
1.4.2. Ecocentrism
1.4.3. Biocentrism
1.4.3.1. Biocentrism as opposed to anthropocentrism
1.4.3.2. Biocentrism as value in life itself
1.5. Human-powered tranportation
1.5.1. Bicycles
1.5.1.1. Bike culture
1.5.1.1.1. Community bike shops
1.5.1.1.2. Communal bike sharing
1.5.1.1.3. Direct action
1.5.1.2. Car culture
1.5.1.3. Cyclo-actvism and classism
2. Free Culture
2.1. Public domain
2.1.1. Kopimi
2.1.2. Post-copyright
2.2. Free art
2.2.1. Free poetry
2.2.2. Free culture and creativity
2.3. Free software
2.3.1. Linux
2.3.1.1. Debian
2.3.1.2. Trisquel
2.3.1.3. Linux Mint
2.4. Free knowledge
2.4.1. Wikimedia Movement
2.4.2. Zine culture
2.5. Piracy
2.5.1. Piracy as direct action
2.5.2. Piracy culture
2.5.3. Pirate movement
2.5.4. Pirate Party
2.6. Sharealike and non-commercial licenses
2.6.1. Licensing
2.7. Liberal views on Free Culture
2.8. Privacy
2.8.1. Tor
2.8.2. Anonymity
2.8.3. Computer security
2.9. Copyright
2.9.1. Intelectual property
2.9.1.1. as private property
2.9.2. Patent law
2.9.2.1. Patent breaking
2.9.2.2. Patent piracy
2.9.3. Copyright as a failure
2.9.4. Moral authorship rights
3. Gender
3.1. Trans* issues
3.1.1. Empowering
3.1.2. Non-binary/genderqueer
3.2. Post-identitary politics
3.2.1. Queer
3.2.1.1. Queer as academical colonization
3.2.1.1.1. Queer as colonization of Brasilian non-binary identities
3.3. Erasure
3.3.1. Trans* erasure
3.3.2. Non-binary erasure
3.4. Gender
3.4.1. Judith Butler
3.4.1.1. Sex as a discourse (as gender)
3.4.2. Gender as a hierarchy
3.4.3. Gender as an oppressive relation of control
3.4.4. Gender as innate
3.4.5. Gender as a copy
3.5. Cisnormativity
3.5.1. Structural cissexism
3.5.2. Cisnormativity and disphoria
4. Racism
4.1. Environmental racism
4.2. Postcolonialism
4.3. Colonization and imperialism
4.3.1. Palestine
4.3.2. Brasilian ethnicities
4.3.2.1. in relation to globalization
4.3.2.2. in relation to imperialism
4.4. History of Japanese immigration in Brasil
4.4.1. Shindo Renmei
4.4.2. countryside of São Paulo
4.5. Native brasilians' rights
4.6. Xenophobia
4.6.1. in Brasil
5. Disability
5.1. Disability studies
5.2. Normalization
5.2.1. Psychiatric normalization
5.2.2. Anatomical normalization
5.3. Inclusion
5.3.1. Inclusion as exclusion
5.3.2. Interdependence
5.4. Structural ableism
5.5. Disability and primitivism
5.6. Disability and abortion
5.7. Disability and drug prohibition/regulation
6. Anarchism
6.1. Anarcho-primitivism
6.2. Infoanarchism
6.3. Veganarchism
6.4. Anarcha-feminism
6.5. Social anarchism
6.5.1. Anarcho-communism
6.5.1.1. Gift economy
6.5.1.2. Common ownership
6.5.1.3. Anti-capitalism
6.5.1.3.1. Classicism
6.5.1.4. Especifismo
6.5.1.5. Revolution
6.5.2. Anarcho-syndicalism
6.5.3. Platformism
6.5.4. Direct action
6.5.4.1. Revolutionary violence
6.6. Individualist anarchism
6.6.1. Lifestyle anarchism
6.6.2. Evolutionist anarchism
6.6.3. Anti-organizational anarchism
6.6.3.1. Insurrectionary anarchism
6.6.4. Anarcho-pacifism
6.7. Anarcho-queer
6.8. Green anarchism
6.8.1. Social ecology
6.9. Philosophical anarchism
6.10. Post-colonial anarchism
6.11. Anarchism as intersectionality
6.11.1. Radical perspectives on intersectionality
7. Feminism
7.1. Body positivity
7.1.1. Fat acceptance
7.1.2. Trans* bodies acceptance
7.2. Radical feminism
7.3. Radical transfeminism
7.4. Gender abolitionism
7.4.1. Gender reformism
7.5. Intersectional feminism
7.5.1. Transfeminism
7.5.2. Black feminism
7.5.3. Islamic feminism
7.5.4. Intersectionality
7.6. Prostitution
7.6.1. Sex commodification
7.6.1.1. Sexual capital
7.6.2. Sex worker rights
7.6.2.1. Sex worker self determination
7.6.2.2. Sex worker sindicalization
7.6.3. Nordic model
8. Animal liberation
8.1. Direct action
8.2. Animal ethics
8.2.1. Abolitionism
8.2.1.1. Antivivisectionism
8.2.1.2. Animal personhood
8.2.1.3. Sentiocentrism
8.2.2. Welfarism
8.2.2.1. Protectionism
8.2.2.2. Utilitarianism
8.2.3. Preservationism
8.3. Vegetarianism
8.3.1. Abolitionist veganism
8.3.2. Utilitarian veganism (Singer)
8.4. Gary Francione
8.4.1. Pacifism
8.5. Liberal views on animal rights
9. Sexuality
9.1. Queer sex
9.2. Non-monogamy
9.2.1. Monogamy
9.2.1.1. Monogamy as a system
9.2.2. Marriage
9.2.3. Relações livres
9.3. BDSM
9.4. Pornography
9.5. Demisexuality
9.6. Non-monosexuality
9.6.1. Pansexuality
9.6.2. Bisexuality
9.6.3. Monosexism
9.6.3.1. Mononormativity
9.6.4. Biphobia/panphobia
9.6.5. Bisexual/pansexual invisibility
9.7. Heteronormativity
9.7.1. Heteronormativity inside identitary politics
9.7.2. Homonormativity
10. Law
10.1. All-drugs liberalization
10.1.1. All-drugs legalization
10.2. Anti-prohibitionism
10.2.1. Anti-prohibitionism in Brasil
10.3. Criminal law
10.3.1. Prison abolition movement
10.4. Gun regulation
10.4.1. Gun prohibition
10.5. Reproductive rights
10.5.1. Any-term abortion legalization
10.5.2. Abortion legalization
10.5.3. Reproductive rights for trans* people
10.6. Copyright
10.6.1. Intelectual property
10.6.2. Patent laws
10.6.3. Moral authorship rights
10.6.4. Piracy decriminalization
11. Academical
11.1. Linguistics
11.1.1. Descriptive grammar
11.1.2. Linguistical prejudice
11.1.3. Planned language
11.1.3.1. Sign language
11.1.3.2. Esperanto
11.1.4. Discourse analysis
11.1.5. Limits of language
11.1.5.1. on itself
11.1.5.2. on reality
11.1.5.3. on how we understand reality
11.1.6. Language as meaning; meaning as use
11.2. Philosophy
11.2.1. Ethics
11.2.2. Aesthetics
11.3. Science
11.3.1. History of science
11.3.2. Critiques of science
11.3.2.1. Anti-cientificism
11.3.2.2. Frankfurt school
11.3.3. Science as an institution
11.3.4. Science production as social construction
11.4. Social sciences
11.4.1. Communication
11.4.1.1. Journalism
11.4.1.1.1. Literary journalism
11.4.1.1.2. Documentary
11.4.2. Sociology