
The Fate of the Revolution
Tunisia’s ruling class is pursuing the same economic policies as the authoritarian regime it replaced.
Ryan Switzer is a PhD candidate in sociology at Stockholm University. He researches right-wing politics in welfare states.
Tunisia’s ruling class is pursuing the same economic policies as the authoritarian regime it replaced.
Young Tunisians, unwilling to abandon the revolution they launched seven years ago, are fighting against a government committed to neoliberal austerity.
A year of perplexing U-turns has left the Podemos project muddled — and the party falling in the polls.
Election results in Cyprus suggest an endorsement of austerity. But the reality is more complex.
In the wake of its impressive performance in last year’s presidential campaign, the movement around Jean-Luc Mélenchon has set about establishing a new kind of political organization.
Tech CEOs are out for themselves, not the public good.
The demand for Medicare for All should become a litmus test for elected officials.
Resistance leader? Not really. Democratic congressman Adam Schiff personifies the link between foreign policy hawks and deep-pocketed defense contractors.
In the 1960s, America discovered the problem of child abuse. But instead of universal childcare, we got prisons.
Financial markets are adjusting to a “new, new normal.” But the old rules of class conflict still apply.
Warnings of looming pension bankruptcy aren’t just overblown. They’re politically dangerous.
Fifty years ago, black mayors ascended to power with transformative change in mind. Today, the most radical thought many have is how to court Amazon.
The situation in Venezuela is complicated. But we should all agree on one thing: the US has no business intervening.
Strikes are labor’s most powerful weapon. But last year they fell to nearly an all-time low.
What is it about capitalism that makes Keynesianism a horizon even would-be revolutionaries have trouble seeing past?
Keynesianism embodies capitalism’s contradictions — and is unable to deliver itself from them.
As the UK Labour Party aims to organize its forgotten heartlands, it can learn from a rich history of socialist culture in working-class communities.
Seven years after Hosni Mubarak was forced from office, Egypt is in the middle of an ugly counterrevolution. Here are the voices of its victims.
Czech president Miloš Zeman’s opponents tried to build a majority among the people while sneering at them.
Turkey’s war on Afrin is an attack not only on Kurdish self-determination, but on democracy and women’s liberation in the Middle East.