
From Zuma to Ramaphosa
Jacob Zuma won’t be remembered as a liberation hero, but as a corrupt leader who broke the South African left.
Jacob Zuma won’t be remembered as a liberation hero, but as a corrupt leader who broke the South African left.
It’s popular to argue that average Americans are abandoning democratic principles. But what if they’re simply fed up with political elites?
Populist symbolism can be powerful — but we can’t drop the old language of class.
Until last month, almost all unpaid internships were technically illegal. Now it’s open season for employers who want free labor.
Liberal conspiracy theorists are using Russiagate to smear Bernie Sanders and Jill Stein. How long until they come for you?
University lecturers in the UK will walk off tomorrow in the largest-ever strike called in British higher education.
The focus group was invented by a socialist, nurtured by corporate America — and revolutionized the relationship between elites and the masses.
Malcolm X died 53 years ago today, just as he was moving toward revolutionary ideas that challenged oppression in all its forms.
Why is the NRA so powerful? Hint: it’s not just because it has boatloads of money.
The British prime minister’s vow to “defeat socialism today” reveals a leadership laughably bereft of ideas.
Managers have been trying to control workers for well over a century. Amazon’s new employee-tracking wristbands are just the latest innovation.
A pioneer in the study of segregation explores a groundbreaking new theory on why American neighborhoods are still so divided along racial lines.
In 1922 communist militant Shapurji Saklatvala was elected on a Labour Party ticket, becoming the first MP of color in the party’s history.
Hungary’s right-wing government is attempting to destroy the Georg Lukács’s archive — and his legacy.
Tunisia’s ruling class is pursuing the same economic policies as the authoritarian regime it replaced.
Young Tunisians, unwilling to abandon the revolution they launched seven years ago, are fighting against a government committed to neoliberal austerity.
A year of perplexing U-turns has left the Podemos project muddled — and the party falling in the polls.
Election results in Cyprus suggest an endorsement of austerity. But the reality is more complex.
In the wake of its impressive performance in last year’s presidential campaign, the movement around Jean-Luc Mélenchon has set about establishing a new kind of political organization.
Tech CEOs are out for themselves, not the public good.