
Love Against the State
Natasha Lennard reflects on the enduring necessity of marriage in order to prove one's love to the state.

Natasha Lennard reflects on the enduring necessity of marriage in order to prove one's love to the state.

For feminists, this election presents a clear choice — between advancing the interests of 1 percent of women and fighting for the liberation of the rest. Bernie Sanders is on the side of the 99 percent.

After three-and-a-half weeks of fierce campaigning, Ireland goes to the polls today. Belfast based journalist Luke Butterly looks at what it’s all about, and what might come next

Sean Bonney, one of the finest British poets of our time, died in Berlin on 13th November. William Rowe discusses his life and work.

Joe Biden is someone who, by virtue of the political, social, and historical forces that shaped his life, made choices and drew political lessons that not only make him ill-suited to combat Trumpism but led him to help engineer the very conditions that handed Trump victory in the first place.

This month 100 years ago, in February 1920, Ernst Toller and Ernst Niekisch became cell neighbours in the Bavarian prison fortress of Niederschönfeld. Both had occupied leading posts in the government of the ill-fated Bavarian Soviet Republic. Here we present a translation of Niekisch's account of his imprisonment with Ernst Toller in Niederschönfeld prison, providing a valuable insight into the aftermath of the Soviet.

History tells us is that progress for working people has only ever been achieved by the collective self-empowerment of organised labour.

Achin Vanaik on Hindu nationalism in India, the BJP's anti-Muslim Citizenship Amendment Act, the lockdown in Kashmir, and India's economic slowdown, with Alex Doherty on the Politics Theory Other podcast.

The government’s bifurcated approach to racial equality is deepening fissures in our movements with anti-racism emerging as a key site of struggle, argues Liz Fekete.

Labour Party deputy leadership candidate Richard Burgon recently called on the party to draft a new version of Clause IV, once more opening up the debate on Labour’s quintessential statement of socialist intent. In this article, Tom Blackburn looks at the history of Clause IV, and the need for a new version for the 21st century.

How did security become the rallying cry for the US government to restrict immigration in the post-war period?

All Jacobin books are 40% off to celebrate the release of All American Nativism by Dan Denvir.