Blog

  • Li Maizi, one of China's "Feminist Five", at a Beijing protest against domestic violence, 2012

    Five Book Plan: Feminism and Gender in China

    Verso author Leta Hong Fincher presents five essential texts on gender and feminism in China. Her new book, Betraying Big Brother, examines the struggles of feminists in China against the patriarchal authoritarianism of the Xi Jinping administration. 

  • John McDonnell is right: we need a new left internationalism

    John McDonnell is right: we need a new left internationalism

    Recent debates on the British and the German left have reopened the question of the relation between socialism, the global economy, and the nation state. In this essay, Christine Berry argues that we must develop a new politics, one that is open to people but closed to global capital, for a truly radical left politics, and one that can overcome the resurgent far right.

  • “I’m not transphobic, but…”: A feminist case against the feminist case against trans inclusivity

    “I’m not transphobic, but…”: A feminist case against the feminist case against trans inclusivity

    This Friday, the 19th October, the Government's consultation on a proposed reform of the Gender Recognition Act will close. The process has become a focal point for a heated and often toxic debate over what we as a society owe to trans people, and how the claims of the trans community relate to the characteristic commitments and concerns of feminism. In this article, Lorna Finlayson, Katharine Jenkins, and Rosie Worsdale make the feminist case for trans inclusivity.

  • Hegemony 2.0

    Hegemony 2.0

    Recent events have conclusively proved that social media is not the neutral global community that it is often taken to be – not least the recent purge of Facebook profiles of those voices critical of US foreign policy. In this article, Lewis Bassett argues that we are beginning to witness the growth of a tech monopoly capitalism that backs up US imperialism, and asks how, in the face of this, can we build a new left media.

  • Borders Are the Crisis

    Borders Are the Crisis

    Who should be protected by the international system of law? Do economic migrants have the same right to entry as those fleeing war and destruction? In this episode of This is Hell! Radio, Daniel Trilling addresses these crucial questions and argues for an international framework that treats migration as a human need, rather than as a problem that can only be solved through violent state repression and militarised borders.