
Five Book Plan: Gentrification and Real Estate
Samuel Stein, author of Capital City: Gentrification and the Real Estate State, suggests five essential books on urban politics and planning.

Samuel Stein, author of Capital City: Gentrification and the Real Estate State, suggests five essential books on urban politics and planning.

Brenton Tarrant, the white supremacist terrorist who killed at least 50 Muslims in New Zealand, titled his manifesto, released shortly before the attack, The Great Replacement. The title recalls the work of French far-right author Renaud Camus, whose ideas have been eagerly taken up by Alain Finkielkraut, and in the manifesto, France looms large as the sight of Tarrant's turn to white supremacy. In this article, Frédéric Debomy castigates the influence of Alain Finkielkraut in France and the power of ideas on political action.

The actions of Brenton Tarrant, the gunman who opened fire on a mosque in Christchurch, New Zealand last Friday, have sparked outrage across the world. It's also raised the question of how the news media should react to such events. In this article, Lorna Finlayson questions the way the UK media has covered these instances of white supremacist violence and argues that such attacks are not made inevitable by immigration itself, nor by 'difference', but by a media and political class which relentlessly scapegoats immigrants and Muslims while bestowing legitimacy on those who preach hatred against them.

The past month has seen mass protests rock Algeria, forcing president of 20 years Abdelaziz Bouteflika to both abandon his fifth-term bid and postpone the elections themselves. In this article Hocine Belalloufi analyses the prospects for the future of the country.

Recent months have seen French politics rocked by two political events: the gilets jaunes protests and the Emmanuel Macron's public statement calling anti-Zionism a form of anti-semitism. In this, an open letter to philosopher Alain Finkielkraut following the attack on him recently in Paris during one of the protests, Dominique Eddé powerfully writes of the pains of the Palestinian people and struggle for a better world.

In this edited excerpt from Dreams of Leaving and Remaining, James Meek presents a topsy-turvy United Kingdom, where Robin Hood now steals from the poor to give to the rich – and gets away with it.

Who Makes Cents is a monthly program devoted to producing engaging stories that explain how capitalism has changed over time.

Jules Joanne Gleeson and Nathaniel Dickson present eight theses on the future of trans politics.

Escalating tensions between the world's two great powers signal an important shift in global politics. In this, the introduction from the latest issue of New Left Review, Susan Watkins discusses the nature of US power and its rivalry with China.
See the newly relaunched and redesigned New Left Review website here.

The Jacobin series is back! To celebrate, we're offering 40% off the entire series through Sunday, January 26th

In response to staff at the University of New Mexico unionising, the university have brought in lawyers from the notorious union-busting law firm Jackson Lewis. In this article, David Correia, associate professor at the university, discussing the current state of higher education in the US and the long history of anti-union activities.

Last week, Mark Zuckerberg announced a series of changes to his global empire - could we be entering into a new stage of development for the internet behemoth? In this article, Lewis Bassett looks at the development of Facebook, and argues for greater democratic control over the use of data.