Blog

  • The law of the land: decolonising criminal justice

    The law of the land: decolonising criminal justice

    From the displacement of indigenous communities to the erasure of black lives, mass incarceration exists to exert political and economic control over racialised subjects. Until we treat criminal justice reform as an act of anti-colonial resistance, they have no hope of emancipation.

  • Universities are going on strike - blame the managers.

    Universities are going on strike - blame the managers.

    Staff at 74 British universities are currently on strike, their third major round of industrial action since 2018. Often cited in discussions of changes to universities since the early 1980s are market pressure. Yet, by invoking market pressures, we too often take the responsibility away from the managers who make decisions. It's not markets, it is the managers who fuel this crisis.

  • Conservation needs a revolution

    Conservation needs a revolution

    The question for conservation is no longer whether we want or need radical change. It is already happening. The question is how we understand the pressures and help direct imminent radical change towards something positive. This is the crossroads facing the conservation community today.

  • Andrew Weatherall: A Portrait of a Windsor No-One Knows

    Andrew Weatherall: A Portrait of a Windsor No-One Knows

    Andrew Weatherall (1963-2020), DJ, radio host and cultural catalyst died on 17th February 2020 at the age of 56. His prolific career and huge influence changed the British musical landscape. Jessica Thorne and Seth Wheeler pay tribute to this visionary artist, and chart his formation in the radical milieu of Windsor.

  • With love, from us to you!

    With love, from us to you!

    This week we're thinking about love, desire and relationships, at the intersection of capitalism, the state, and heteronormativity. And, Love Island. 

  • Fashion’s Click and Collect: A Labour Perspective

    Fashion’s Click and Collect: A Labour Perspective

    Moving with trends across the economy, people increasingly purchase their clothes online. But what has this done to labour in the fashion industry? Here, Angela McRobbie writes on the new political economy of fashion, and the degradation of labour in this traditionally feminised sector.