Gang of Four (disambiguation)
Appearance
Look up Gang of Four in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
The Gang of Four was a political faction of four Chinese Communist Party officials, prominent during the Cultural Revolution 1966–1976.
Gang of Four may also refer to:
Arts and entertainment
[edit]- Gang of Four (band), an English post-punk band
- Gang of Four (board game), by Days of Wonder
- Gang of Four, 2004 novel by Liz Byrski
- Gang of Four (film), a 1989 French film
Political groups
[edit]- Gang of Four (Afghanistan): Aslam Watanjar, Sayed Muhammad Gulabzoy, Sherjan Mazdoryar, Asadullah Sarwar
- Gang of Four (Australian Labor Party): Kevin Rudd, Julia Gillard, Wayne Swan, Lindsay Tanner
- Gang of Four (Australian Democrats): Lyn Allison, John Cherry, Andrew Murray, Aden Ridgeway
- Gang of Four (Harlem), U.S.: David Dinkins, Basil Paterson, Charles Rangel, Percy Sutton
- Gang of Four (Pakistan): two different uses to describe four generals
- Gang of Four (Papua New Guinea): Mekere Morauta, Charles Lepani, Rabbie Namaliu and Anthony Siaguru
- Gang of Four (pro-Contra) in the U.S.: Bernard W. Aronson, Bruce P. Cameron, Robert S. Leiken, Penn Kemble
- Gang of Four (SDP), UK: four politicians who founded the Social Democratic Party
- Gang of Four (Seattle), U.S.: Bernie Whitebear, Bob Santos, Roberto Maestas, Larry Gossett
- Gang of Four in Colorado, U.S., or the Four Horsemen: Pat Stryker, Jared Polis, Tim Gill, Rutt Bridges
Other groups
[edit]- Big Four tech companies, or Gang of Four: Alphabet, Amazon, Apple and Meta
- Gang of Four (software), authors of computing book Design Patterns
- Gang of Four (Cisco, DEC, StrataCom and Nortel) who set a standard for a Local Management Interface in networking
- Gang of Four paper by Kreps, Milgrom, Roberts and Wilson, about game theory and reputation formation
See also
[edit]- All pages with titles beginning with Gang of
- Big Four (disambiguation)
- Four Asian Tigers: the economies of Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan
- Four group (disambiguation)
- Gang of 14, a bipartisan group of U.S. Senators in the 109th Congress