
Disrupting Apartheid
A conversation with Lara Kiswani about Block the Boat and the BDS movement.
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
A conversation with Lara Kiswani about Block the Boat and the BDS movement.
The World Series is in full swing, powered by the hidden labor of Costa Rican workers.
Independence leader Benny Wenda discusses the struggle against “secret genocide” in West Papua.
Venezuela’s Bolivarian Revolution hasn’t established socialism. But it has brought the poor into public life.
The United States is allies with Saudi Arabia not in spite of the country’s authoritarian political order, but because of it.
What’s next for Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement?
Careerism has its own moralism, serving as an anesthetic against competing moral claims.
The education reform movement has brought “broken windows” policing into the classroom.
Relying on state violence to curb domestic violence only ends up harming the most marginalized women.
David Fincher’s Gone Girl revels in the sickness of our culture by making it seem attractive.
The rich have too much. Hiking the estate tax would be a powerful tool in a broader anti-inequality campaign.
How the PLO went from building a developmental state in exile to accepting a neoliberal economy under colonialism.
The Nobel Prize’s wish to separate literature from politics isn’t just misguided. It’s impossible.
The radical teamsters of Minneapolis showed what democratic unionism looks like.
Elites in Detroit say they want to turn around the city. Their plan is to privatize land and funnel more resources to the rich.
Besieged on all sides, the resistance in Kobanê needs international solidarity.
James Oakes on why the Left should study the movements that abolished slavery.
The Market Basket strike had conservative aims. But leftists can learn from the solidarity it inspired.
In Mexico and elsewhere, neoliberalism isn’t a retreat of the state. It’s using the state to enrich the wealthy.
We need a world without borders, not more thugs patrolling them.