
The Specter of Capital
How the housing crash got us believing in ghosts again.
Frances Abele CM is Distinguished Research Professor and Chancellor’s Professor of Public Policy Emerita at Carleton University. She is a research fellow at the Carleton Centre for Community Innovation and the Broadbent Institute. Much of her work focuses on indigenous-Canada relations.
How the housing crash got us believing in ghosts again.
Despite nearly destroying the global economy in 2008, the shadow banking revolution marches on.
Don’t know the difference between an asset-backed security and your ass? We’re here to help.
Frankfurt/Rome, 5 August 2011
Here’s what you should read.
Two centuries of mergers and splits in America’s banking sector.
The mortgage crisis in four charts.
What do you get when you cross big-money politics and tepid progressive positions? A look back at the career of Nancy Pelosi, who’s now poised to retake the House Speaker post.
In 2008, Hyman Minsky finally had his moment. But he was miscast as a prophet of financial collapse. The real “Minsky moment” was the bailout, not the crash.
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Bernie Sanders’s social media videos are putting class struggle front and center.
This June Podemos helped the Socialists kick the Spanish conservatives out of office. But for Íñigo Errejón, defeating the oligarchs in the long term requires a new “national-popular” strategy.
El Chapo’s trial continues this week, brimming with sordid tales of kingpins and cartels. But what the media spectacle can’t justify is a failing “war on drugs” that has taken the lives of hundreds of thousands of people.
The history of the Black Power movement offers a cautionary tale about the warping effects of liberal philanthropy’s soft power.
Republicans could not have conquered the labor stronghold of Wisconsin without the complacency of the Democratic Party.
Political organizing is hard — political education shouldn’t have to be. Introducing our ABCs of Capitalism series.
Between world wars and a crippling civil war, the Russian Revolution fought to change history.
The United States has long danced with dictators in Central America. US support for Honduran president Juan Orlando Hernández is no different.
For the young Max Eastman, socialism meant open inquiry, cultural experimentation — and above all, freedom.