Occupy After Occupy
Its critics may disagree, but Occupy Wall Street’s legacy has been an enduring one.
T Rivers is a pseudonymous journalist who covers East and Central Africa.
Its critics may disagree, but Occupy Wall Street’s legacy has been an enduring one.
Piketty’s Capital in the Twenty-First Century shows that not everything in mainstream economics is worthless.
For all Piketty’s mainstream respectability, it is only the radical left and the labor movement — not treasuries and central banks — that can push his program.
With last week’s elections, commentators are heralding the “end of Europe,” but the evidence tells a different story.
Piketty’s warnings of a capitalism without meritocracy are being challenged by an ossified economic theory.
Thomas Piketty’s Capital in the Twenty-First Century has been covered ad nauseam. But how it will change the ideological landscape remains to be seen.
General Baker spent his life in struggle on the streets and in the auto plants of Detroit.
When it comes to the narcissism of war, no one has quite the self-deluding capacity of the intellectual.
Has the New York Times ever disavowed its condescending editorials on the Civil Rights Movement?
Speaking at Harvard this week, Sandberg “sent word she does not have time to host a ‘Lean In circle’ with the hotel employees.”
With next week’s gubernatorial endorsement, we may finally reach the limits of the Working Families Party’s “inside-outside” strategy.
Over the next week, Jacobin will be hosting events at the Left Forum conference and elsewhere in New York.
On the Carnation Revolution’s fortieth anniversary, Portugal’s elites want to use its legacy to justify austerity.
The images of genuine popular self-determination in the streets of Kiev are empty ones.
If the Right wants to cry about class warfare, we should give them something to cry about.
What better way to reform capitalism’s losers than to force them to pay to play?
Even at a time of low pay and degraded working conditions, meritocratic notions surrounding white collar work are hard to dispel.
Bernd Riexinger, co-chair of Germany’s Left Party, talks about socialist strategy in the twenty-first century.
Individual activists — no matter how talented — must depend on the movement they represent.