vonu
English
Etymology
Coined in the 1960s by the Association of the Free Isles libertarian organisation.[1]
Noun
vonu
- (neologism) The act of covertly residing in a secluded area (off the grid) and refraining from interaction with authorities, such as the government.
- 1986, Stewart Brand, editor, The Essential Whole Earth Catalog: Access to Tools and Ideas, Doubleday, →ISBN, page 143:
- The legendary Rayo was a vonu pioneer. His writings are well worth reading for every libertarian and freedom seeker.
- 1992, Mike Gunderloy, Cari Goldberg Janice, The World of Zines: A Guide to the Independent Magazine Revolution, Penguin Books, →ISBN, page 78:
- This is one of the best places to read about vonu, an idea that had a vogue in underground circles in the seventies.
- 2009, Bennie Lee Ferguson, What is a Nation: The Micronationalist Challenge to Traditional Concepts of the Nation-state (Thesis), Wichita State University, page 174:
- In any case, the unorthodox approach taken by proponents of the "vonu" lifestyle would seem to indicate that the limited "sovereignty" it seeks to create is a primary goal of the association and that it is not particularly concerned with legitimacy in a traditional sense.
Fijian
Etymology
From Proto-Central Pacific *voñu, from Proto-Oceanic *poñu (compare Hawaiian honu, Maori honu, Rapa Nui honu), from Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *pəñu (compare Indonesian penyu, Malay penyu), from Proto-Austronesian *pəñu.
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