
Beyond the Liberal Voting Rights Agenda
We should expand voting rights to advance democracy — not just the Democratic Party.
We should expand voting rights to advance democracy — not just the Democratic Party.
Podemos leader Pablo Iglesias talks to Jacobin about the Catalan elections, the future of Spain’s left, and the fight for state power.
The government runs a publicly funded spy training program for corporate America. It’s called the CIA.
Seventy years ago, the Taft-Hartley Act ushered in “right-to-work” laws and imposed draconian restrictions on workers’ rights. The labor movement still hasn’t recovered.
Just until Christmas, Jacobin gift subscriptions are only $10.
True to its name, the Industrial Workers of the World spanned the globe — an international history that has long been forgotten.
Between October 1917 and April 1918, the Bolshevik government enacted the most radically democratic platform in history.
Chile’s reinvigorated left is ready to finally vanquish Pinochet’s legacy and reclaim democracy for the many.
“We want a left that can learn from 1917 Russia and 1976 Sweden.”
Digital microwork in the Middle East exploits occupation, war, and neoliberalism to extract the cheapest labor possible.
John Adams and Peter Sellars’s Girls of the Golden West is bland, poorly staged liberalism.
At this weekend’s ANC congress, South Africa doesn’t need a new leader, it needs a new economy.
Sure, rigged, “crony capitalism” generates enormous inequality. But unrigged capitalism does the same thing.
A look back at Liberator, an anticolonial magazine that operated during a golden age for black radical publications.
Under Ed Lee, San Francisco was remade into a playground for tech capitalists and real estate developers.
The United States recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital as part of its decades-long support of Israeli colonialism.
Why do conservatives like capitalism? Because it keeps in place the hierarchies they cherish.
The story of how America’s imperial quest for labor shaped the hemisphere’s working class.
With its assault on the estate tax, the GOP is demonstrating that it’s not even under the thumb of the 1 percent, but the 0.2 percent.
1997 was a cultural watershed for a new, “cool” neoliberalism.