A delivery rider drives an electric scooter past skyscrapers in Shenzhen, China.

The Other Side of China’s Economic Miracle

China has witnessed the greatest stretch of sustained growth and poverty alleviation in human history, made possible by the brutal exploitation of millions workers. A new book recounts the life of one of them offering a glimpse into the dark side of China’s success.

Belgian MP Peter Mertens delivers a speech during a plenary session of the Chamber at the Federal Parliament in Brussels.

Your Wars Just Aren’t Worth It

The Belgian Workers’ Party is the strongest rising force on Europe’s radical left. Its general secretary, Peter Mertens, writes for Jacobin on his party’s fight against the EU’s rearmament plans.

Nurses in New York City on the picket line

Building 21st-Century Rank-and-File Unionism

A small but important segment of the New Left “turned to industry,” getting jobs in steel, auto, and elsewhere to build a militant current in the US labor movement. The Rank-and-File Project is aiming to build a similar current of democratic, militant unionism today.

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Socialism cannot mean merely managing capitalism more fairly. It must point toward a society where survival is no longer contingent on the market — and where democracy extends into the economy itself.

UC Irvine professor Catherine Liu

Putting the Marxism Back Into “Cultural Marxism”

The Palm Springs School for Social Research wants to revitalize historical materialism, revive ideology critique, and ask big questions about social life. We talked to one of its founders, Catherine Liu, about gangster capitalism and the future of socialism.

Senegal's defender El Hadji Malick Diouf celebrates his team’s victory at the end of the Africa Cup of Nations on January 18, 2026.

Senegal Is in the World Cup but Hardly Made Welcome

One of Africa’s top teams, Senegal has good reason to look forward to the World Cup. But the US government has put up major barriers to its fans and journalists visiting the country, in a policy of deep discrimination against Senegalese citizens.

Strikers stand in front of the Birtat factory in Baden-Württemberg, Murr, Germany, on August 6, 2025.

How Döner Workers Skewered Their Bosses

Döner is one of Germany’s favorite fast-food meals, but workers processing the meat for the skewers are badly paid. Now they’ve won their first ever collective agreement, after a 12-day strike waged by a multinational workforce.

Parents hold their newborn twin children in Long Beach, California, 2023

Stop Yapping and Pay New Parents

Is “girlboss feminism” responsible for declining birth rates? Are endocrine disruptors lowering teenage boys’ sperm counts? Stop asking ridiculous questions designed to stir up the culture wars, and start figuring out how to put cash in new parents’ pockets.

The writer Édouard Louis speaks at an event on his book "The Crash" as part of the 25th Berlin International Literature Festival at the Haus der Berliner Festspiele in Berlin on September 20, 2025.

How Not to Write About Class

For over a decade, Édouard Louis has been one of France’s most perceptive writers on his country’s working class. But as he has drifted away from this milieu, he has swapped clear-eyed analysis for cliché-ridden romanticization of the suffering poor.

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Jacobin is a leading voice of the American left, offering socialist perspectives on politics, economics, and culture.

$29.95
1 Year / 4 Issues
Digital Subscription
$39.95
1 Year / 4 Issues
Print + Digital Subscription