
Michael Sorkin: 250 Things an Architect Should Know
An excerpt from What Comes Up: The Right and Wrongs to the City.

An excerpt from What Comes Up: The Right and Wrongs to the City.

An unexpected beneficiary of the COVID-19 pandemic may well be the environment, with the global lockdown leading to falling air pollution levels and rapidly clearing rivers and seas. From this, many have concluded that the virus may be "nature's revenge" on humans – that "we are the virus". Here, Jennifer Johnson analyses the danger of taking lessons on climate change from the huge human toll of the coronavirus.

The past few weeks have seen images spreading around the internet of empty streets and deserted cities. But what do these images tell us about the present moment, and what does their cultural value suggest about our relationship to the current crisis?

In response to the novel coronavirus outbreak, mutual aid groups have sprung up across Britain to help those most vulnerable. Adam Quarshie looks at the actions of these solidarity networks, and asks what we can learn from the history of mutual aid.

The novel coronavirus outbreak is a new global crisis. Yet the current crisis is not only the result of a new pathogen circulating around the world. It is also a crisis of care. Here the Care Collective (Andreas Chatzidakis, Jamie Hakim, Jo Littler, Catherine Rottenberg, Lynne Segal) outline the contours of the crisis of care, and how we can think care work different.

On Wednesday 18th March, Angela McRobbie was admitted to hospital with what turned out to be COVID-19. Here she discusses her experiences of the virus, and pays tribute to those low paid workers who are at the forefront of efforts to tackle the pandemic.

Anticapitalist and anarchofeminist manifestos from Emma Goldman and subRosa collective.

The COVID-19 pandemic is affecting every aspect of life across the world. But none are hit as hard, and with such a weak safety net, as those in the creative industries. Melissa Chemam discusses the impact of the crisis on Britain's artists, writers and musicians, and what the public response must be.


Many on the left have argued that the current crisis precipitated by the COVID-19 pandemic could lead to the conditions for a new socialism to emerge from the ashes. But, as Christine Berry argues, crises aren't only opportunities for the left, and the conditions that are emerging could well play into the hands of a renewed far-right.

Fuel your rage with feminist manifestos for the revolution!

Leanne Betasamosake Simpson's sharp critique of the loss of indigenous people to the forces of whiteness and colonization.