Market anarchists are radical advocates of individual liberty and mutual consent in every aspect of social life -- thus rejecting all forms of domination and government as invasions against liberty and violations of human dignity.
Source: Markets Not Capitalism (2011)
[link] #218People cooperate peacefully and voluntarily when they interact without aggression. A just society, a society rooted in peaceful, voluntary cooperation, is both possible and desirable. Because the state precludes and preempts this kind of cooperation, aggressing or threatening to engage in aggression against those who disobey it, a peaceful, voluntary society must be a stateless society -- an anarchist society.
Source: Anarchy and Legal Order (2013)
[link] #483To reject aggression is to embrace a model of social interaction rooted in peaceful, voluntary cooperation. This kind of cooperation can occur without the state; it can be fostered effectively by a variety of nonaggressive social institutions, including, in particular, institutions upholding consensual legal rules, resolving disputes, and providing protection against aggression... Unlike these institutions, the state is premised on the denial of human moral equality and is inimical to peaceful, voluntary cooperation (and the flourishing such cooperation facilitates) because of the state's nonconsensual character and its inefficiency, destructiveness, rapacity, and penchant for aggression--especially in the service of elite groups.
Source: Anarchy and Legal Order (2013)
[link] #514To a very significant degree, the economic system we have now is one from which peaceful, voluntary exchange is absent. An interlocking web of legal and regulatory privileges benefit the wealthy and well connected at the expense of everyone else (think patents and copyrights, tariffs, restrictions on banking, occupational licensing rules, land-use restrictions, etc.). The military-industrial complex funnels unbelievable amounts of money--at gunpoint--from ordinary people's pockets and into the bank accounts of government contractors and their cronies. Subsidies of all kinds feed a network of privileged businesses and non-profits. And the state protects titles to land taken at gunpoint or engrossed by arbitrary fiat before distribution to favored individuals and groups. No, the economies of the US, Canada, Western Europe, Japan, and Australia, at least, aren’t centrally planned. The state doesn’t assert formal ownership of (most of) the means of production. But the state's involvement at multiple levels in guaranteeing and bolstering economic privilege makes it hard to describe the economic system we have now as free.
Source: Embracing Markets, Opposing “Capitalism” (2011)
[link] #704About Gary Chartier

Gary William Chartier (born 1966) is an American philosopher and legal scholar best known for his 2013 book Anarchy and Legal Order. His work addresses anarchism and ethics. Chartier is a professor and serves as associate dean of La Sierra University's business school.
Chartier was born in 1966, in Glendale, California, and raised in a conservative Protestant (Seventh-day Adventist) home. His father was an accountant and physician. In high school, Chartier became interested in economic libertarian authors, following his father's ideological lean. He received his bachelor's degree from La Sierra University in 1987 and his Ph.D. from the University of Cambridge in 1991. After working as the editor of a newspaper in Temecula, California, Chartier enrolled at the UCLA School of Law, graduating with a J.D. in 2001. During his legal studies, he served as a lecturer in business ethics at La Sierra and began a full-time academic appointment there in September 2001. In 2015, the University of Cambridge presented Chartier with an honorary LLD in recognition of his work in legal theory. He is currently Associate Dean and Distinguished Professor of Law and Business Ethics at La Sierra's Zapara School of Business.
Chartier defends a variant of natural law thinking, which he has employed in discussions of anarchism, economic life, and the moral status and claims of non-human animals, as well as such other topics as sexuality and lying.
Kevin Carson's work, in particular, provided a model for Chartier's reconciliation of his leftist politics with opposition to the state, and helped him to combine left-libertarian market anarchism with insights from natural law theory.
Additional Resources
"Markets Not Capitalism," Says Professor Gary Chartier - ReasonTV | YouTubeGaryChartier.net