
Marx’s America
Marx is thought of as a purely European phenomenon. But his radical politics were indelibly shaped by his encounters with American life.
Marx is thought of as a purely European phenomenon. But his radical politics were indelibly shaped by his encounters with American life.
Banned in warfare yet routinely used to quell protest at home, tear gas epitomizes the contradictions of modern state violence.
A look at James Comey’s tough-on-crime career shows that his worst scandals had nothing to do with Hillary Clinton’s emails.
After six days of striking, Arizona educators are returning to work. Jacobin spoke with three strike leaders to assess the settlement.
AMLO is going to win the Mexican election, unless elites take him out first.
One year after the tragic fire in Grenfell, Labour are trying to unseat the local Tory council in today’s election. We speak to area MP Emma Dent Coad about their prospects.
An interview with Sônia Guajajara, an indigenous woman running for Brazil’s presidency.
Every week, Jacobin Radio’s The Dig introduces you to the Left’s brightest thinkers and activists.
We need a movement against war and imperialism that isn’t tied to the Democratic Party.
Science has immense potential for emancipation — but it must be rescued from its anti-democratic ideologues.
Ten years ago today, West Coast longshore workers celebrated May Day by walking out against the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Why are unions so weak in the US? Because for well over a century, employers have used every tactic in the book to crush them.
The WWE teamed up with Saudi Arabia last weekend to whitewash the country’s brutal autocracy.
Arizona has long been ground zero for school privatization. Striking educators now have a chance to turn back the tide.
Though not unblemished, socialists in the United States have a record in confronting black oppression that is unmatched by other political traditions.
1968 was a decisive turning point in the Cuban Revolution.
Remainers claim that Brexit will be an economic apocalypse. But it provides the opportunity for a radical break with neoliberalism.
This year marks the 30th anniversary of the battle of Cuito Cuanavale, when Cubans joined Angolans to defeat the South African apartheid regime.
Today marks the anniversary of Benito Mussolini’s execution. But the legacy of his regime continues to linger in Italian politics.
The New York Times is wrong — the Finnish public hasn’t turned against the jobless.