
What the Women’s Strike Means
The International Women’s Strike is about taking on the degradations of capitalism in all spheres of life.
Ryan Switzer is a PhD candidate in sociology at Stockholm University. He researches right-wing politics in welfare states.
The International Women’s Strike is about taking on the degradations of capitalism in all spheres of life.
Trump’s Congressional address gave his nightmarish agenda a newly “presidential” gloss. We should be worried.
The greatest threat to Colombia’s peace deal doesn’t come from the Left, but from right-wing paramilitaries.
Even after public services have been privatized, workers have opportunities to fight back.
Hillary Clinton’s failed candidacy exposed the limits of corporate feminism. We need something better.
Michael Novak made his name by providing theological cover for capitalism. The passing of his generation signals a new opening for religious socialism.
The Democratic establishment waged war on Keith Ellison. We should respond in kind.
Robert Brenner and Bhaskar Sunkara on how the Left can seize the momentum and build a majority.
Incarceration is on the rise in small, poor towns across the country — often with deadly consequences.
Guilt is a sad, passive emotion — and it won’t help us build a more diverse left.
Liberal defenses of free speech ring hollow. But socialists can’t abandon the principle.
Who are the British volunteers fighting with the Kurdish YPG in Rojava?
You can’t fight Herrenvolk populism with weak-tea liberalism.
As universities replace the lecture with active learning pedagogy, we should remember the benefits of collective listening.
Canadian union organizer and leader Bob White was committed to charting an independent and democratic course for workers.
The Women’s Strike on March 8 can help ramp up the movement against Trump.
Early Soviet filmmakers took great inspiration from Charlie Chaplin, but his critique of mass production put him at odds with them.
For India’s poor, the cost of Prime Minister Modi’s demonetization policy is steep.
Militarism runs deep in the United States, but historian Marilyn Young never gave up believing that it could be overcome.
Many believe Trump’s administration will usher in a new era of protectionism. But it’s not that simple.