A Different Kind of Shutdown
Does the Left have anything to learn from the Tea Party?
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.
Does the Left have anything to learn from the Tea Party?
This century’s LGBTQ liberation movement must be part of a broader project to redefine human freedom.
Behind the bizarre ideology that fuels Adbusters.
Robert Taft would have felt at home among today’s Senate reactionaries.
Football players at Grambling State did they only thing they could do — they went on strike.
The Fight for 15 campaign has the potential to revitalize and transform the labor movement.
The fight at the heart of the BART strike isn’t over whether or not to innovate — it’s about innovation that improves transit service without degrading and disempowering workers.
Union workers – especially union workers on strike – really piss the Bay Area technorati off.
A socialist-feminist classic appeared just as Thatcherism began pulverizing the Left. Today, should it be read as historical document or a blueprint for action?
Focusing only on the intransigent right during the ongoing budget battles lets the weak, passive left off the hook.
The British right’s posthumous attacks on Ralph Miliband may have revived his ideas for a new generation on the Left.
Congress is preparing to expand the guestworker program, but Mexican braceros remain unpaid after half a century.
The fascist Golden Dawn party has drawn Greece’s ruling party further right — and opened space for deeper austerity measures.
Today’s Republican extremism owes more to the Constitution that established the Union than the secessionists who sundered it. It’s Hoover’s party — and Madison’s — not Calhoun’s.
Ralph Miliband was no patriot. He was a stern critic of the British ruling elite and its institutions.
Maurice Dobb was one of John Maynard Keynes’ favorite students. He was also a committed Marxist.
Obama has a peculiar view of class struggle and progress.
The Making of Global Capitalism marks the start of a project to construct a new historical materialist analysis of the American empire and the world system it oversees.
A growing number of Americans are realizing that “good jobs” aren’t coming back, and that for things to get better, they’re going to have to fight to turn their McJobs into something better.
The Occupy Card undermines its own stated values, redefining citizen as consumer.