
Don’t Mourn, Organize!
Two letters by the labor singer Joe Hill, who was executed 100 years ago today.
T Rivers is a pseudonymous journalist who covers East and Central Africa.
Two letters by the labor singer Joe Hill, who was executed 100 years ago today.
The French secular ideal of laïcité is not a misused noble idea — it is deeply flawed at its roots.
The discourse of war is already upon us. But it must be resisted.
There’s nothing progressive about community policing — it deepens criminalization and expands police power.
The domestic workers who asserted their rights in the 1970s provide a model for organizing workers today.
US interventionism has helped defeat working-class struggles in Guatemala, resulting in enduring violence and poverty.
Steven Salaita has reached a settlement with the university that fired him for criticizing Israel.
The tragic attacks in Paris call for a politics of international solidarity and antiracism — not a new wave of war and repression.
Polish writer Miron Białoszewski poked holes in nationalist myths with idiosyncratic prose.
The movement for labor to endorse Bernie Sanders is part of an effort to bring political decision-making back to the rank-and-file.
Poland’s recent elections cemented right-wing dominance and the neoliberal trajectory of the past two decades. Can the Left recover?
Corporate-driven development partnerships benefit their sponsors more than those in the Global South.
We must insist on the political nature of tragedy because politics offers the only way out of violence and injustice.
The collapse of Portugal’s right-wing government is welcome, but the Left risks becoming complicit in a new round of austerity.
A new book on Ruth Bader Ginsburg celebrates the liberal project of achieving social change through the courts. But that project has failed.
The growing youth movement against Prime Minister Shinzō Abe is disrupting Japan’s conservative status quo.
Israel’s brutal occupation and refusal to negotiate a just settlement are to blame for the recent spike in violence.
Brazil’s Vale corporation masks brutal exploitation with the language of South-South solidarity.
Ed Miliband was no radical. But he helped lay the groundwork for Jeremy Corbyn’s rise, New Left Review’s Robin Blackburn argues.
Microcredit is nothing more than a socially validated way for financial elites to exploit the poor.