
Behind the Compromise
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras on the referendum and the agreement that followed.
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.
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras on the referendum and the agreement that followed.
Today in 1945, the United States committed one of the most horrific atrocities in military history. Why?
Economic demands and specifically antiracist demands should not be counterposed — they should be brought together.
The UN’s new Sustainable Development Goals aim to save the world without transforming it.
Jeremy Corbyn’s momentum in the Labour Party leadership election shows British politics is moving leftward.
Panic over automation misses the real problem — that workers themselves are treated like machines.
We can’t equate the horrendous treatment of animals with the oppression of people.
On this day in 1945, the US dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan. Here’s one survivor’s story.
Amazon’s success lies in worker exploitation and intrusions into consumers’ private lives.
The question is never if resistance will appear, but when. For this generation, Ferguson answered that question.
People across the political spectrum support a universal basic income. Socialists must make the anticapitalist case for it.
What accounts for the Nordic countries’ strong welfare states? Hint: it’s not white homogeneity.
Kshama Sawant has shown how electoral and movement politics can grow together.
Some lessons from Syriza — and where we go from here.
The Turkish government is using the massacre in Suruç to wage war — not on ISIS, but on the Kurdish liberation movement.
Israel is beating Iran and Hezbollah hands down on the “bad activities” front.
Frederick Douglass and the story of New York City’s 1865 “Emancipation Jubilee.”
A labor movement that seeks to fight oppression has no room for police unions.
In light of developments in Greece, Germany’s Die Linke needs to consider how it relates to the European Union.
Activists defeated the Boston Olympics bid by doing what its proponents refused to: going to the people.