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40 years of radical publishing

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Recent contributors

  • Lewis Bassett
  • Natasha Lewis
  • Alberto Toscano
  • Alyssa Goldstein
  • Huw Lemmey

Recently mentioned authors

  • Paul Mason
  • Rigoberta Menchú
  • Shlomo Sand
  • McKenzie Wark
  • Vijay Prashad
  • All authors
    • Vivek Chibber
    • Chase Madar
    • Joe Glenton

Recently mentioned books

  • Why It's Still Kicking Off Everywhere
  • The Passion of Bradley Manning
  • Fanaticism
  • The Invention of the Land of Israel
  • Critique of Political Reason
  • See more books
    • The Meaning of the Second World War
    • Religion and the Rise of Capitalism
    • The Spectacle of Disintegration
    • The Poorer Nations
    • The End of the Revolution
    • The Coming of the Book
    • The History of the Paris Commune of 1871
    • Altai
    • Soldier Box
    • Street-Fighting Years
    • Artificial Hells
    • The Making of New World Slavery
    • Why Did the Heavens Not Darken?
    • Meltdown
    • I, Rigoberta Menchú
    • Praised Be Our Lords
    • Kashmir
    • The Persistence of the Old Regime
    • Passages from Antiquity to Feudalism
    • Postcolonial Theory and the Specter of Capital
    • The Spectre of Comparisons
    • The Emancipated Spectator
    • A History of Gold and Money
    • Lineages of the Absolutist State
    • Media Manifestos
    • The Rebirth of History
    • The Overthrow of Colonial Slavery
    • Agrarian Sociology of Ancient Civilizations
    • > View full catalog

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  • "The concrete facts of love"—Investigating Sex in the Observer

    Despite occuring over 80 years ago, the discussions in Investigating Sex feel refreshingly contemporary in their frankness, according to Zoe Strimpel in the Observer- although the attitudes towards women feel more than dated.

    Continue Reading

    By Huw Lemmey / 20 February 2012 / post comment

  • Costas Lapavitsas on escaping the eurozone crisis

    The myth of Greek profligacy must be broken, according the Costas Lapavitsas, in order to confront the problems in the Eurozone. Rather, the current crisis in Europe must be traced back to a global crisis which has been "deflected through the institutions of the monetary union". It is the divergent competitiveness of the periphery states that has led to the current account imbalances, the structural surpluses and deficits. An unbalanced monetary union has led to debt accumulation, not a bloated public sector.

    Continue Reading

    By Huw Lemmey / 20 February 2012 / 1 comment

  • JSA + expenses—the future of work?

    As youth unemployment raises to well over 1 million, with little sign of a crest to that wave of misery, Tesco offer a chink of light. A dream job: a permanent placement (no pension) working nights (no sick pay) with training (30 hours per week). The wage? Nothing. But, if you don't take it, you're liable to have your benefits and job seekers allowance removed for up to 6 months.

    Effectively, working 30 hours a week for your JSA will give you an hourly wage of £2.25 (or £1.78 p/h if you're one of the 1.04 million unemployed youth). Welcome to Workfare Britain.

    From May to November last year over 24,000 jobseekers were forced to engage in Mandatory Work Activity (MWA), for 30 hours per week, providing participating corporations with hundreds of thousands of hours of free labour each week, according to the Guardian. There was also a high variance in ethnic minorities forced into unpaid labour, with 24% of those involved coming from ethnic minorities, as opposed to 13% on voluntary "work experience" schemes. Under MWA any recipient of Job Seekers Allowance (JSA) faces having their JSA stripped for 3 months for refusing the take part in the scheme, with a 6 month sanction for a second offence. Plans are currently underway to introduce a sanction for a third offence, meaning those who refuse to offer their labour for free will face being banned from claiming JSA for three years. There are plans afoot to implement a similar system for the long-term sick and disabled.

    Continue Reading

    By Huw Lemmey / 20 February 2012 / post comment

  • Owen Jones on BBC Question Time

    Appearing on BBC Question Time last night, Owen Jones attacked the government's Health Reform Bill, stating that the "Tories have absolutely no mandate for what they're doing to our NHS", as well as slamming New Labour for "laying the foundations" for the privatisation of the health service. 

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    By Huw Lemmey / 17 February 2012 / post comment

  • The wisdom of gravediggers—Paul Mason at the LSE

    In his recent address to LSE, available now as a video and podcast, Paul Mason delves into the complex behavioural mechanics and social and economic phenoma that, for him, suggest the uprisings that began in 2011 may be something very unusual: not a normal business cycle, or a  "50-year Kondratiev Wave", but an epoch-changing convergence of economic collapse, technological revolution and new networked subjectivities.

    First outlining the collapse of North African regimes throughout the Arab Spring through the analogy of a Shakespearean history plays, Mason goes on to look at the shifting change in peoples' relationship with power structures, and how the development of new communication technologies have opened up public discourse about those power structures.

    Unable to maintain a narrative of dignity and respect, the old authoritarians who maintained social order at the price of justice saw their ideological foundations slip away in the face of public derision. Like those very Shakespeare plays, Mason says, "the innkeepers and gravediggers sound like philosophers", whilst the strong-men and their courtiers look increasingly like fools, holding on to the certainties of old dogmas that are being washed away.

    Continue Reading

    By Huw Lemmey / 17 February 2012 / post comment

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