The Crisis in American Labor: An Interview with Sam Gindin
The class war against workers demands a class response.
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.
The class war against workers demands a class response.
The media is debating food politics — and missing the mark.
Fewer workers are in unions, but density in itself doesn’t always translate into power.
The troublesome question of aging.
Sometimes bad service is class struggle.
City Council Speaker — and leading mayoral candidate — Christine Quinn is one of the signatories to that “other” letter about the Brooklyn College BDS panel from the “progressive” government officials and politicians.
Family, nostalgia and the failure of formal-equality feminism.
This morning, Karen Gould, the president of Brooklyn College, issued an extraordinarily powerful statement in defense of academic freedom.
From Debtor’s Prison to Debtor Nation.
You can’t divorce fiery emotions from the politics of revolution.
Capital used to sell us visions of tomorrow.
Those DJs lost. Serato is everywhere, and it happened with less resistance than one might have expected. Maybe it’s because many DJs are interested in exploring new technology; maybe it’s because they aren’t organized as a labor force.
Liberal pundits and Republican congressmen agree: Barack Obama’s second inaugural was the most liberal speech of his presidency. They may be right. But just what kind of liberalism is this?
The rapid integration of formerly obscure, wonkish outsiders into the media spotlight elite is easy to understand. Technocratic analysis and blogging that divorces policy from politics dovetail neatly with the noble-sounding notions of objectivity long dominant in American journalism.
Imagining radical change in Palestine.
Read the CliffsNotes, impress your fancy friends.
A reply to Seth Ackerman’s “The Red and the Black.”