
“Our Flag Is Education”
A youth leader’s powerful testimony on Brazil’s student movement, which is defending public education through over 1,000 school occupations.
Enver Motala is an associate of the Centre for Education Rights and Transformation (CERT) at the University of Johannesburg and of the Centre for Integrated Post-School Education and Training at the Nelson Mandela University.
A youth leader’s powerful testimony on Brazil’s student movement, which is defending public education through over 1,000 school occupations.
Western journalists can’t admit that Venezuela’s opposition is neither democratic nor peaceful.
Bill Clinton’s New Markets initiative tried to fight poverty by showering incentives on the private sector. And now Hillary has embraced it.
Labour strategies that try to win over English workers through patriotic appeals are both condescending and self-defeating.
This Halloween, let’s welcome the rebellion against zombie capitalism.
More than five decades after its founding, the Black Panther Party’s antiracist, anticapitalist vision remains just as relevant today.
An interview with Yusef Salaam, one of the five men of color wrongfully convicted in the 1989 Central Park jogger case.
The nineteenth-century bourgeoisie used morality to assert class dominance — something elites still do today.
The latest round of WikiLeaks shows Clinton’s high-ranking labor allies were happy to tip the scales in her favor.
The once mighty French Communist Party is a shell of its former self. What happened to its mass base?
The French Communist Party left a checkered record on anti-imperialism.
Okinawan residents have built a broad movement to resist the power of the United States military in Japan.
Center-left politicians’ championing of free trade will only fuel right-wing forces on both sides of the Atlantic.
The Podesta emails show that Democratic power brokers won’t reward labor’s unwavering loyalty or record contributions.
What today’s labor radicals can learn from the socialists who helped build the CIO in the 1930s.
At Princeton, college graduates step into six-figure salaries. At Sing Sing, they step back into their cells.
Many of Harvard’s prominent Democratic Party cheerleaders couldn’t be bothered to support the dining hall workers’ strike.
The Boys in the Boat wants us to cheer US victories in the 1936 Olympics while ignoring how they legitimized the Nazi government.
Mark Lilla’s prosecution of radical thinkers in the name of intellectual seriousness can only lead to a flat and lifeless politics.
Mormons are the most strongly Republican religious group in the country. Why aren’t they supporting Trump?