
Harry Leslie Smith (1923–2018)
The life of Harry Leslie Smith, a working-class rebel to the end, was a towering monument to socialist compassion, internationalism, and peace.
James Bloodworth is a writer and journalist from London.
The life of Harry Leslie Smith, a working-class rebel to the end, was a towering monument to socialist compassion, internationalism, and peace.
Social media will always be destructive for the Left. We should log the fuck off.
Economic historian Adam Tooze on a decade of shattered illusions and the limits of the neoliberal imagination.
How a decade of crisis changed economics.
US immigration and refugee policy has long been determined by what is most politically beneficial to the US — not who actually deserves protection.
Hillary Clinton has called on Europe to harden its borders. The strategy is completely wrong, but it’s also already underway — the EU is outsourcing border enforcement to states in Africa and the Middle East.
The United Teachers of Los Angeles are on the precipice of a historic strike against corporate education reform.
Behind the façade of the bumbling upper-class twit, Britain’s right-wing tribune is playing a canny long game. His goal: injecting far-right ideas into the mainstream.
US refugee policy holds that only victims of political violence, not “private” acts like domestic abuse or gang violence, deserve refugee status. But we can’t talk about such violence in Central America without talking about mass incarceration and US policy in the region.
The future of socialism hangs in the balance — and Jacobin has an important role to play.
Shoot a leprechaun, take his pot of gold.
Getting banks under control is a matter of politics, not individual consumer decisions.
Ten years after the financial crisis, we see how life is treating some of our favorite Wall Street villains.
Ten years after the financial crisis Blairism is finally dead and buried.
How Amalgamated Bank went from a tool for garment workers to a tool of finance capital.
Can European democracy survive the reign of unelected central bankers?
Cleveland’s Quicken Loans Arena is a monument to the subprime mortgage crisis and the companies that caused it.
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.