
On Charlie Hebdo
The murder of Charlie Hebdo journalists is appalling. But we should fear the coming Islamophobic backlash.
T Rivers is a pseudonymous journalist who covers East and Central Africa.
The murder of Charlie Hebdo journalists is appalling. But we should fear the coming Islamophobic backlash.
The slow decline of the Brazilian Workers’ Party has emboldened the country’s growing right wing.
The Irish anti-austerity movement is changing what’s politically possible on the island.
The significance of the struggle in Kobanê cannot be overstated. But real international solidarity won’t come in the form of military intervention.
An interview with one of the founders of England’s Lesbians and Gays Support the Miners, the subject of the new movie Pride.
Labor-management partnerships will not revive the union movement.
Sarah Jaffe explores how the new tools, tactics, and styles of young radicals are changing the Left.
“Riots” aren’t random occurrences. They’re a reaction to structural oppression.
David Harvey and Leo Panitch on the contradictions of capitalism and how to build movements that go beyond localism.
The last year in Jacobin, lovingly compiled.
Naomi Klein rightly blames capitalism for climate change. But she doesn’t go far enough.
The recent killing of two New York City police officers can’t be allowed to silence the movement against police brutality.
The labor movement should rally against police violence, whether police unions like it or not.
Don’t blame recent bloodshed in Jerusalem on religion. The incitement is Israeli policy.
The Socialist International has long embraced capitalism in some of its worst forms.
How do figures like Bill Maher and Richard Dawkins contribute to Islamophobia in American culture?
The Central Intelligence Agency tortured captives by playing everything from Marilyn Manson to songs from Sesame Street.
One hundred years ago today, soldiers dropped their weapons and resisted war.
The oppressed of the Middle Ages drew on Christian teachings to develop a moral critique of their era’s inequality and unfairness.
It’s not just that New York’s leaders are spineless. They’re frightened, which is far more dangerous.