
On Nations and Nationalism
In this 1979 essay, historian Pierre Vilar reconstructs nineteenth- and twentieth-century Marxist theories of the nation — against the claim that they do not exist.

In this 1979 essay, historian Pierre Vilar reconstructs nineteenth- and twentieth-century Marxist theories of the nation — against the claim that they do not exist.

Trump's trash talking is so gratuitously hurtful and so illuminating of how white nationalism works that it is worth lingering on.

Ali Abdullah Saleh is dead, but his politics are very much alive in Yemen.

Angela Davis discusses the development of anti-racist, Marxist feminisms.

Joan Martínez Alier, Stefania Barca, Roberto Sciarelli, Salvatore Engel Di Mauro, Marica Di Pierri and A Sud, and Emanuele Leonardi reflect on the life and work of James O'Connor.

Paris’s candidate dossier for its bid to host the 2024 Olympic Games illustrates how the IOC curtails civil liberties in host countries.

A 2016 book reveals pro-European intellectuals of the 1930s who greeted Nazi invasion as a historic opportunity for their project.

New York City and the real estate interests that run it decided long ago that working class lives are worth gambling with.

Watch a televised 1965 discussion between Alain Badiou and Michel Foucault on philosophy and psychology.

Owen Hatherley surveys the Russian Revolution centennial literature.

Lifting the ban on offshore drilling is one of the most significant environmental decisions yet taken by the Trump administration.

Éric Toussaint, the spokesman of the Committee for the Abolition of Illegitimate Debt (CADTM) and scientific director of the Greek Debt Truth Audit Commission, describes the findings of the commission and the legal avenues available to Greece for the repudiation of a significant portion of its debt.