
Building the Union at Moe's Books
Organizing workers at a celebrated community bookstore

Organizing workers at a celebrated community bookstore

When a Philadelphia public high school teacher discovered dangerously high levels of CO2 in her classroom, it kicked off a fight about inequality, capitalism and the power of socialist organizing in America's crumbling public school system.

As his latest book Revolution is published, the Italian historian Enzo Traverso discusses the French presidential election and the uses that the left can make of the past to imagine its future.

Ben Smoke interviews Matt Foot and Morag Livingstone, authors of Charged: How the Police Try to Suppress Protest.

Marking the 57th anniversary of the 1965 April revolution in the Dominican Republic and the subsequent US military invasion, historian Amaury Rodriguez speaks to Mike Davis about the left-wing mobilizations in solidarity with the Dominican people and the legacy and lessons for anti-imperialist activists today.
To be a Kashmiri in India is to be a stranger in your own country. Writer Majid Maqbool here writes about the experience of Kashmiris under the rule of Modi and the BJP.

Organizing book workers, from the page to the pallet

Historian John Newsinger responds to Simon Heffer and Andrew Robert's review of Tariq Ali’s powerful new demolition of the Churchill myth, Winston Churchill: His Times, His Crimes.

Join us at these launch events for Bad Gays: A Homosexual History! Includes London, Oxford, Cardiff, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Bristol, and Cambridge.

"This is without a doubt one of the best and most important books I have ever worked on, and I am so happy to share it with you."

Following the shocking case of Lacey Ellen Fletcher, Jodie Hare argues that the public perception of autism needs to be radically revised through a better understanding of neurodivergence.

As authors Troy Vettese and Drew Pendergrass argue in their thrilling and provocative new book, we must humbly accept that humanity cannot fully understand or control the earth—but we can plan new energy systems, large-scale rewilding, and food production for the common good.
Here the authors present their Five Book Plan for imagining a utopian eco-socialist future – or a future at all.