
Class Action: Presented by the Chicago Teacher Union’s CORE Caucus and Jacobin
With your help, Jacobin and the Chicago Teachers Union’s CORE Caucus will produce a color booklet on neoliberal education reform.
Ryan Switzer is a PhD candidate in sociology at Stockholm University. He researches right-wing politics in welfare states.
With your help, Jacobin and the Chicago Teachers Union’s CORE Caucus will produce a color booklet on neoliberal education reform.
Just as mass incarceration uses the gloss of rehabilitation to hide the realities of social control, military intervention has appropriated the language of humanitarianism to disguise imperialist motives.
Friedman fires more volleys of cliche into the densely packed prejudices of his readers.
A letter from Gilbert Achcar on Greg Shupak’s recent Libya piece.
With a vacuous social vision, economics confronts the “return of the social question” woefully unprepared.
Introducing the Jacobin books section.
In his new book, Ben Davis’s arguments too often take the form of smug, self-righteous dismissals that convey only disapproval.
In the popular imagination, opposition to the Vietnam War was driven largely by the privileged, while supposedly reactionary blue-collar workers supported the war effort. That memory is wrong.
The Libyan campaign not only caused extensive death and human rights violations, but it may usher in decades of more war.
Teacher unions offer our best shot at revitalizing the labor movement.
Can literature be a force in the fight for economic justice?
The overthrow of all intellectual property leaves unanswered the question of how to control the exploitation of the cultural commons by digital capitalists.
The exploitative relationship between city and countryside pervades Chinese life. Nowhere is inequality in access to public goods clearer than in the country’s urban education system.
Queer theory fought the marriage equality movement and lost. What comes next will require scholars to come out of their journals and into the streets.
The memory of riot grrrl deepens the divide between cultural and material feminism, hobbling critiques of inequality by mistaking self-improvement for revolution.
To put it most unkindly, trap music is adult contemporary for the prosumer age.
So long as the karmic tip jar clouds our perceptions, the insane injustice of an underpaid labor force reimbursed through only the guilty feelings of their coworkers will persist.
Gendered conceptions of credit and reward are written into the structures of intellectual property law.
With roots in the laws of seventeenth and eighteenth-century England, intellectual property protections go back to the beginnings of capitalism itself.