
Like Chopping Onions: At the World’s Largest Security Expo
Tear Gas author Anna Feigenbaum visits Milipol.

Tear Gas author Anna Feigenbaum visits Milipol.

Last week, on Thursday 7 December 2017, Trump recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, pledging the relocation of the US embassy to the city. Defying UN resolutions emphasizing the international status of Jerusalem, Trump’s move reverses years of American policy on the matter and has been met with widespread condemnation, sparking protests in the region. We asked Israeli historian and author, Ilan Pappe, for his views on the unfolding situation.

In one of his final statements, Nicos Poulantzas discusses the relationship between Marx and Lenin, communist parties and social movements, and the institutions of representative democracy after the Eurocommunist turn.

Lennard J. Davis explores Deafness as nationality.

The republication of If They Come in the Morning is an invitation to pick up the work documented in the book.

Socialism is back on the agenda, but how did it happen and where can Labour go from here?

Balibar discusses nationalism, universalism, Europe, resistance, and the influence of Althusser.

A round-up of our 2017 paperback highlights!

2017 demonstrated that climate chaos is happening here and now rather than in some distant future.

Responses from Chiara Bottici, Neil Faulkner, Rose Sydney Parfitt, Tim Jacoby, Charlie Post, Yannis Stavrakakis, William I. Robinson, Laurence Davis, Elena Loizidou, Cenk Saraçoğlu, Eva Nanopoulos, Chip Berlet, Stephen Hopgood, and Jessica Northey.

A mixtape for the Black Radical Tradition.

What made Trump and Trumpism possible is a crisis of hegemony.