The AKP’s Hegemonic Crisis
Erdoğan has unleashed a massive purge in the wake of last month’s attempted coup. But he’s weaker than he appears.
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.
Erdoğan has unleashed a massive purge in the wake of last month’s attempted coup. But he’s weaker than he appears.
We can turn the Olympics from a corporate wonderland into a place of mass celebration and popular competition.
Recent local elections show the bleak future of South African politics: two centrist parties and no left alternative.
Soviet architecture had diverse and ambitious ideas for transforming the spaces people live, work, and travel in.
Jeffersonian Democrats made a serious attempt to implement Locke’s theories. Colonization and expropriation followed.
Framing Donald Trump as an indecent anomaly exonerates the movement and party that produced him.
The Labour Party’s historical crises are rooted in crises of capitalism.
The bipartisan consensus of endless wars and attacks on civil liberties laid the groundwork for Trump’s toxic agenda.
The police’s flippant behavior towards their victims confirms that the institution will never reform itself.
The Japanese prime minister’s plans for “resilience” will serve corporations and US military goals more than the Japanese people.
The Libertarian Party is trying to position itself as an alternative to both Clinton and Trump. But there’s nothing progressive about it.
Tom Watson’s hunt for Trotskyists does more than misrepresent Corbyn’s movement — it opens the door to attacks on party democracy.
The casino workers’ strike at the Trump Taj Mahal Casino is a defining battle for American labor.
Democratic presidents have been responsible for some of the most punitive immigration policies in modern history.
The history of Labor Notes shows that labor’s strength — and socialists’ relevance — depend on a militant and independent rank and file.
Timothy Snyder’s Black Earth misuses the horrors of the Holocaust in the service of Zionist and neoconservative platitudes.
The teachers’ protests that have erupted in Mexico are part of a century-long fight for equitable schools and genuine democracy.
District 65 grew powerful by organizing low-wage workers that had been ignored by the traditional labor movement.
Unions must expand beyond narrow bargaining to challenge those who hold wealth and power at the highest levels.
The Clinton Foundation allows the Clinton family to accumulate wealth and power, all under the guise of humanitarianism.