The Marxists Internet Archive (also known as MIA or Marxists.org) is a volunteer based non-profit organization that maintains a multi-lingual Internet archive of Marxist writers and other similar authors (socialists, anarchists, etc.) on the website http://www.marxists.org.
The archive was created in 1990 when a worker - known only by his Internet nickname, Zodiac - started archiving Marxism by transcribing the works of Marx and Engels into E-Text. In 1993 the accumulated text was posted on a website for the first time. Volunteers joined and helped spread and mirror the main archive. However, the main website and its mirrors were on academic servers and by 1995 almost every university closed down the mirrors.
By 1996 the website, Marx.org, was hosted on a commercial internet service provider. This was followed by an increased activity from the volunteers. In the following years, a conflict developed between the volunteers working on the website and Zodiac, who retained control of the project. This resulted in a split.
In July 1998 the present form of the Marxists Internet Archive (marxists.org) was created. This lead to a further increase in activity and an enlargement of the scope of the archive.-*
The website, and the group of volunteers working on it, has dramatically changed since its early beginnings. Now the Marxists Internet Archive is a recognized repository for both Marxist and non-Marxist writers.
The MIA is controlled by a steering committee. The Committee decides issues such as the categorization of writers, modifications to the bylaws (By 3/4 majority), financial issues of all kinds, and similar matters.
Administrators are volunteers who assume additional responsibilities over certain section(s) of MIA.-*
According to the MIA charter, its content will always be offered 100% free. All the material stored in the archives is either Public Domain, under the GNU Free Documentation License, or used with the copyright holders' permission. Any work created by MIA volunteers is under the Creative Commons Attribute, share-alike 2.0 license.-*
These measures are not only meant to allow easy access to the material in the archive, but also as a way of ensuring the continuity of the archive. As they put it: “If the Archive is shut down by a publishing conglomerate or the government, having this information widely dispersed around the world, essentially untraceable, with the content entirely intact, is a great thing.”-*
The markup and style of the archive varies from one section to the other, depending on the volunteers who work there, but all are built on a common basic document template.
The archive plans to contain all deceased Marxist writers' works, which includes fiction and non-fiction work, regardless of whether it was written on Marxism or not.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Marxists Internet Archive".
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