
Striking Against Macron
French unions will strike today against Macron’s anti-labor reforms. It is likely to be the beginning of a long battle.
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.
French unions will strike today against Macron’s anti-labor reforms. It is likely to be the beginning of a long battle.
Trump’s draconian sanctions against Venezuela will hit the country’s workers and poor the hardest.
The marketplace of ideas, like all markets, is a highly structured one, privileging some ideas over others.
In 1960, C. Wright Mills traveled to Cuba to give voice to the country’s revolutionaries. The result was one of the era’s most influential polemics.
A leader of Norway’s Socialist Left Party on tomorrow’s elections and how small, insurgent parties can change society.
Norway’s parliamentary elections on Monday will point the way forward for the country’s left.
An interview with the actor, playwright, and socialist Wallace Shawn.
American corporations are rolling in enormous profits. But they still aren’t investing.
As Argentina’s right consolidates power, an activist’s disappearance at the hands of the police has unearthed memories of the dictatorship.
How big-money influence and loose financial regulations are allowing human rights abusers to launder their public image through soccer.
The Left can’t allow itself to be consumed by debates about antifa. We need a proactive program and patient organizing.
The catastrophic flooding in India shows that the greatest victims of global warming will be those least responsible for it.
Throughout his career, Bill Maher has delighted in scolding the powerless.
US warmongering left North Korea with a simple lesson: it might be worth hanging on to its nuclear weapons.
One hundred years ago, why did the alliance between General Lavr Kornilov and Alexander Kerensky fall apart?
The reason our schools and bridges are decaying is clear: we’re spending next to nothing.
Liberals are obsessed with “cultural appropriation” nowadays. But what would a materialist account of the phenomenon look like?
There’s no avoiding politics when talking about Hurricane Harvey and its tragic aftermath.
After Hurricane Harvey, Trump and one of the most right-wing state governments in history get to “rebuild” an area of more than 7 million people.
The October Revolution was propelled by mass dissatisfaction with the erosion of February’s gains.