
The Corbyn Generation
The 2010 student protests in the UK seemed to end in failure. But they foreshadowed Jeremy Corbyn’s improbable rise to the top of the Labour Party.
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
The 2010 student protests in the UK seemed to end in failure. But they foreshadowed Jeremy Corbyn’s improbable rise to the top of the Labour Party.
One year after leaving the White House, Obama’s centrist, technocratic politics are clearer than ever.
A UK construction giant’s failure should be the last nail in the coffin for twenty-five years of privatization dogma.
At its best, the labor movement hasn’t just fought for better wages. It’s fought to bring democracy to workplaces marked by despotism.
America’s patchwork system of social services makes it hard to care for ourselves.
Barbara and Karen Fields, the authors of Racecraft, on the illusion of race, the dead-end of “whiteness,” and the need to revive class politics.
At job search clubs across the country, unemployed workers are taught to blame themselves for their joblessness — not the system that produced their precarity.
We shouldn’t fetishize mom and pops. They offer lower wages, skimpier benefits, and inferior labor protections.
Lucy Parsons’s life was rife with contradictions. But her commitment to workers’ emancipation was never in doubt.
Trump’s assault on Medicaid highlights the cancer at the heart of the US welfare state: means-testing.
Go ahead and watch Tom Brady play football today, but whatever you do, don’t read his book.
Hundreds of thousands of Salvadorans will soon be at risk of deportation — just the latest injustice they’ve suffered at the hands of the US state.
In Burma, state racism isn’t just perpetrated by its military, but liberals like Aung San Suu Kyi.
Leon Trotsky’s History of the Russian Revolution remains a singular work of Marxist historiography.
In postindustrial Baltimore, low-income residents are treated as expendable — and public services are slashed accordingly.
Beset by inequality and corruption, Iran’s provincial working classes are revolting against the revolution’s broken promises.
Churchill was no hero — he was a vile racist fanatical about violence and fiercely supportive of imperialism.
Rural hospitals are closing at an alarming rate. And the profit motive is to blame.
How real estate barons and investment bankers plotted the destruction of working-class New York.