
Libya and Its Contexts
The Libyan campaign not only caused extensive death and human rights violations, but it may usher in decades of more war.
Abigail Torre grew up in Chile and now lives in Berkeley, California where she is cochair of the East Bay chapter of Democratic Socialists of America.
The Libyan campaign not only caused extensive death and human rights violations, but it may usher in decades of more war.
Teacher unions offer our best shot at revitalizing the labor movement.
Can literature be a force in the fight for economic justice?
The overthrow of all intellectual property leaves unanswered the question of how to control the exploitation of the cultural commons by digital capitalists.
The exploitative relationship between city and countryside pervades Chinese life. Nowhere is inequality in access to public goods clearer than in the country’s urban education system.
Queer theory fought the marriage equality movement and lost. What comes next will require scholars to come out of their journals and into the streets.
The memory of riot grrrl deepens the divide between cultural and material feminism, hobbling critiques of inequality by mistaking self-improvement for revolution.
To put it most unkindly, trap music is adult contemporary for the prosumer age.
So long as the karmic tip jar clouds our perceptions, the insane injustice of an underpaid labor force reimbursed through only the guilty feelings of their coworkers will persist.
Gendered conceptions of credit and reward are written into the structures of intellectual property law.
With roots in the laws of seventeenth and eighteenth-century England, intellectual property protections go back to the beginnings of capitalism itself.
At least Verbinski tries to bring intelligent, politically-savvy revisionist westerns back into style.
Law and lawyers can’t save us from the creeping police state – but politics might.
How many times must we witness the collapse of good intentions into horror and failure?
Pitting public power against unbridled accumulation, DC’s living wage legislation is an attempt to rectify injustice in the market. And capitalists can’t stand it.
The Left doesn’t need a renewed emphasis on morality — we must reclaim the concept of self-interest.
The New York City mayoral candidate talks about labor issues and more.
Our long march through the institutions is not to reform them, but to transform the common sense they uphold.
Why focus on laws and regulations aimed at controlling sex workers rather than recognizing their agency?