Blog

  • Natasha Lennard on non-fascist life

    Natasha Lennard on non-fascist life

    Natasha Lennard on whether or not Donald Trump and the movement that has coalesced around him ought to be characterised as fascist and the history of anti-fascist violence and its treatment by the media, with Alex Doherty on the Politics Theory Other podcast. 

  • The last nineteenth century German philosopher: Habermas at 90

    The last nineteenth century German philosopher: Habermas at 90

    Raymond Geuss' recent article discussing the German philosopher Jürgen Habermas on the occasion of his 90th birthday sparked a fierce controversy. Here Raymond Geuss responds to his critics and argues that the liberal philosophy of Habermas is fundamentally inadequate in the face of the crises of contemporary capitalism.

  • On Immortality

    On Immortality

    What does it mean to write about immortality in relation to communism, Mao Zedong Thought, and people’s experiences of life under the Chinese Communist Party? 

  • Eco-Fascisms and Eco-Socialisms

    Eco-Fascisms and Eco-Socialisms

    As the scale of the impending climate crisis is increasingly clear to all, we are left with a stark choice: eco-socialism or eco-fascism. Max Ajl surveys the landscape of ecological politics, and argues for an genuinely internationalist eco-socialism as the only way to defeat eco-fascism.

  • Detention camps are concentration camps

    Detention camps are concentration camps

    The Global Detention Project has identified more than 2,000 detention centers worldwide. For corporate powers and global elites borders have been erased, but migrants fleeing violence and economic insecurity are faced with deportation or detainment in inhumane detention centers. Todd Miller responds to the crisis at the border and exposes the contradictions in the government justifying the use of concentration camps to detain migrants.

  • Twenty-First Century Battlefields

    Twenty-First Century Battlefields

    In place of conventional warfare, securocratic wars, waged to protect and secure not individual nations but the international class of wealthy nations, insert themselves into the yawning gaps of global inequalities. Wars on drugs, on terror, on immigrants have created never-ending battlescapes, often along borders.