
Fighting Broken Windows Policing in NYC in the '90s and '00s
A recent history of broken windows policing with Joo-Hyun Kang, director of Communities United for Police Reform.

A recent history of broken windows policing with Joo-Hyun Kang, director of Communities United for Police Reform.

Adam Hanieh on the challenges Covid-19 and the debt crisis pose to countries in the global south, with Alex Doherty on the Politics Theory Other podcast.

An interview with Angela Davis in October 1970 from the Women's House of Detention, New York.

The place of this riot is the street, the street where Michael Brown was murdered, the street where people gathered to await the news that his killer would not be indicted, the street where people met up afterward. The matching scenes from around the nation convey an uncanny sense of coordination, of organization without an organization.

The tainted origins of modern policing are as a tool of social control. The best solution to bad policing may be an end to policing.

Linda Melvern, author of Intent to Deceive, on the arrest of Felicien Kabuga, one of leaders of the 1994 genocide of the Tutsi.

... and back in print! From Stuart Hall to Ellen Meiksins Wood, stock up on these classic works of theory and politics.

In the face of a future in which only the richest schools thrive, it’s worth asking: what value do these Ivy League schools serve for the rest of society? Barnard student Khadija Hussain reports on the Ivy League-to-finance pipeline.

An interview with Etienne Balibar explores how concept and history drives his thinking of Marx

From New Delhi, Shigraf Zahbi reports on how "the virus" became "the Muslim virus" in less than a week.

Barnaby Raine writes to mark the launch of a new class on Marx and his writing, as part of The Brooklyn Institute summer season

Freya Marshall Payne looks at how communities have been imagined under COVID-19 and what the future of Mutual Aid might be after the virus.