
What’s Next After “Right to Work”?
“Right to work” is about to spread to Wisconsin. But with patient organizing, the Left can still respond.
Agathe Dorra is a PhD researcher in political aesthetics at King’s College London
“Right to work” is about to spread to Wisconsin. But with patient organizing, the Left can still respond.
Progressive narratives about what’s driving mass incarceration don’t quite add up.
The recent police killing of a homeless man in Los Angeles shows how the capitalist state treats the marginalized.
Dana Goldstein’s new history of American teaching is superb. But she’s much too easy on the “reformers” undermining public education.
Philanthrocapitalists like George Soros want us to believe they can remedy the economic misery that they themselves create.
In criticizing capitalism for mass consumption instead of exploitation, The Americans uses Soviet characters to valorize austerity.
Leonard Nimoy’s passing reminds us of the spirit of wonder and discovery represented by Spock and the Star Trek series.
In his new project, Nicholas Kristof argues that hope, not politics, can solve poverty.
Syriza’s leadership is operating under difficult conditions. How should we interpret its actions, and what would an alternative look like?
What would you tell six hundred leading German social democrats about their party’s handling of the Eurocrisis?
Sweden shows the promise and limits of the welfare state.
Syriza’s deal with Greece’s creditors hasn’t bought more time or avoided austerity. It’s demobilized Greek workers.
Support for Pakistan’s counterterrorism campaign is widespread. But it is waged largely against the poor and disenfranchised.
As it tries to subdue Greece’s oligarchs, Syriza also must rein in the police.
The negotiation strategy of Syriza’s leadership failed. But it’s not too late to avert total defeat.
Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel is up for reelection tomorrow, promising to continue his campaign against public education in the city.
Syriza is divided over whether Greece should leave the eurozone — and at what cost.
Leo Panitch on Syriza, party building, and how socialists should approach state power.
An unrepentant whitewash of murder and occupation, American Sniper shouldn’t be up for any Oscars tonight.
Dutch finance minister Jeroen Dijsselbloem’s political career shows the rightward shift of European social democracy.