
Hungary after Communism
The only forces tapping into Hungarian discontent are on the Right.
T Rivers is a pseudonymous journalist who covers East and Central Africa.
The only forces tapping into Hungarian discontent are on the Right.
Postcolonial theorists have to stop insisting we choose between the universal and the particular.
Since Raúl Castro assumed power in 2006 promising reforms, Cuban politics has seen the slow emergence of new tendencies and debates. The prospects for the country’s left, however, remain uncertain.
The inaugural episode of Jacobin Radio Chicago.
How should we assess the 2008 economic crash — and the political possibilities beyond it?
Luxury condo development can’t solve the affordable housing crisis — only public housing can.
Violence has long been a part of the Lebanese landscape.
The inaugural episode of Jacobin Radio Philadelphia.
Our next issue will be mailed to subscribers January 2 and released online January 13.
Part two of a roundtable on what’s next for Canadian workers.
Liberals fear the term “entitlements,” but that’s language the Left should claim.
NYU grad students’ recent unionization after over a decade of struggle is a victory against the corporatized university.
While Mandela was certainly a “great historical figure,” too many tributes have been unable to move beyond hagiography.
If art is to engage the world as an active force, it needs to be both grounded in the world of everyday life and go beyond it.
The catch-all populism of Arvind Kejriwal and the Aam Aadmi Party has proven politically expedient in India.
Gravity points us back to the sensation cinema practices of the silent era, and it’s dimly possible that the American film industry might save itself by learning, or re-learning, from them.
Leo Panitch on Ralph Miliband and fifty years of the Socialist Register.
The Left wants to give people the chance to do something with their lives, by giving them time and space away from the market.
The left hopes to push a de Blasio administration, but his police commissioner may not budge.
It’s not so much that Obama “sold us out” to a powerful constituency as that he picked the wrong powerful constituency. A quick look at the financial details reveals that health insurance nationalization was always the real “path of least resistance.”