Apologies if these have been brought up before, I haven't read the first 21 pages.
How might an anarchist society be implemented and sustained?
I don't like the idea of implementing anarchy in a geographical sense. I don't look for the day Italy will become an anarchist nation, or something like that.
Anarchist relations and social solutions are everywhere, and they are in fact, the norm. We're engaging in one right now, interaction based on non-coercion.
The struggle then, isn't to seize power and drive out the "statists" or whatever you want to call them, but is the struggle between non-coercive behavior, and the coercive apparatuses of society.
The struggle for an Anarchist way of life is therefor a very personal struggle. It is not a struggle like other political movements, because it is a rejection of the political in place of the humane. That's not a struggle that can be measured in square miles controlled, or subscribers on a mailing list, but only in genuine human interaction.
What are the differences between anarchism and libertarianism?
While Anarchism is the rejection of the coersive apparatus of the state, Libertarianism is about stripping the state of the trappings and accouterments that the state has acquired over the centuries, and paring it down to it's essential function: the regulation of property and the implementation of violence.
In this regard, libertarianism is the most fundamentally keen eyed political movement today, because they haven't been drawn in by the ideological disguises Social Democratic, or Conservative Nationalist/Theological have tried to place over the state.
They understand the state is not created to help people. It is not, and was not conceived of, as such an exercise.
At the same time, they're by far the farthest from political reality, because they don't understand the roles these ideological justifications play. The state did not begin looking after people's livelihoods because the state is a thing to enrich our lives. It did so as a way to continue and extend it's power, and to grease the wheels of property ownership.
And lastly, because they're so keen sighted, Libertarianism is the most morally dysfunctional form of politics that has current currency. Because it sees the state for what it really is, and then sets about ensuring it does not even have a veneer of good deeds anymore.
Do you know anything about Élisée Reclus?
Not a thing. I'll have to try and read him.