
A militant and a scholar. Remembering Domenico Losurdo (1941-2018)
Angelo d'Orsi remembers the work of Domenico Losurdo

Angelo d'Orsi remembers the work of Domenico Losurdo

Domenico Losurdo looks at the foundational link between liberalism and Atlantic slavery, and liberal philosophers' shifting positions on slavery in the period between Somersett v Stewart and the American Civil War.

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's victory as an open critic of the Israeli Occupation may be a new bellwether in American politics.

While the Catholic Church and transphobic feminists alike paint trans activists as propagandists of "gender ideology," trans people have achieved gains in recent years by working not as ideologues, but ethical instructors.

Three historians defend critical history against the disciplinary essentialism and realist epistemologies that permeate the field.

Óscar Martínez considers why Central American migrants will not stop seeking a way into the trap of the United States.

Understanding the Spanish 68 requires an understanding of the rise of anti-Francoism in the previous years and its evolution after the state of exception declared in January 1969.

Hannah Proctor on the influence of radical psychiatry on the events of May '68.

Peace activist Christine Ahn condemns the dangerous, opportunistic response to Trump's North Korea talks from American liberals.

The refugees, migrants, sans-papiers, and people in solidarity occupying Paris-8 University to demand documents and housing for all denounce the manipulations of the French state.

Today in Argentina we see a battle for political spirituality in the streets, in houses, in beds, and in schools.

In the Soviet Union, 1968 marked the end of reformist optimism and the beginning of a more cynical era.