
The Disappearing Strike
Strikes are labor’s most powerful weapon. But last year they fell to nearly an all-time low.
William G. Martin teaches at SUNY-Binghamton and is co-author of After Prisons? Freedom, Decarceration, and Justice Disinvestment (2016) and a founding member of Justice and Unity for the Southern Tier; he covers local justice matters at www.justtalk.blog
Strikes are labor’s most powerful weapon. But last year they fell to nearly an all-time low.
What is it about capitalism that makes Keynesianism a horizon even would-be revolutionaries have trouble seeing past?
Keynesianism embodies capitalism’s contradictions — and is unable to deliver itself from them.
As the UK Labour Party aims to organize its forgotten heartlands, it can learn from a rich history of socialist culture in working-class communities.
Seven years after Hosni Mubarak was forced from office, Egypt is in the middle of an ugly counterrevolution. Here are the voices of its victims.
Czech president Miloš Zeman’s opponents tried to build a majority among the people while sneering at them.
Turkey’s war on Afrin is an attack not only on Kurdish self-determination, but on democracy and women’s liberation in the Middle East.
The stock market’s panicked reaction to signs of wage growth shows just how weak the economy is — and how much it caters to the wealthy.
A fascist terrorist attack has highlighted the growing threat of Italy’s far right in the lead-up to the March 4 elections.
How Greek austerity and multinational mining companies have ravaged Aristotle’s birthplace.
It’s presidential election year in Brazil, and anything is possible.
Luring corporations like Amazon with hefty tax breaks impoverishes cities and starves public services. We should put an end to it once and for all.
Republican grandstanding against Trump while backing nearly all of his policies isn’t resistance — it’s just a cynical PR move.
Why do young people have a favorable view of socialism? Because the economic system has utterly failed them.
Wages are finally rising. But it’s only bosses who are getting the pay hikes.
Philanthropists like Howard Buffett are the darlings of journalists and the NGO world — but are they really helping Africa?
The Young Karl Marx is a nuanced and surprisingly accurate portrait of the revolutionary as a young man.
Jordan Peterson’s thought is filled with pseudo-science, bad pop psychology, and deep irrationalism. In other words, he’s full of shit.
If the US is in the throes of a constitutional crisis, it’s one oddly devoid of social substance.
The euro was at the center of Italian political debate for years. But, as election day approaches, the issue has vanished from the stage.