Blog

  • US politics in a moment of crisis

    US politics in a moment of crisis

    A reading list of US politics books on what to learn from the Bernie Sanders campaign, the legacy of Henry Wallace, the emotion driving members of the US Communist Party in the mid twentieth century and more.

  • Downwards, ever downwards

    Downwards, ever downwards

    Now that the world has made men speechless, not to be on speaking terms is to be in the right. The wordless need only stick immovably to their interests and their natures to get their way.

  • The liberal hegemony is crumbling

    The liberal hegemony is crumbling

    At a time when reactionaries openly return to the crudest forms of racism, sexism and classism, left-wing alternatives cannot be bound by innately reactionary ideas of patriotism or nationalism.

  • Inside the UK biobank

    Do biobanks serve the common good?

    In response to the current COVID-19 crisis the UK Biobank, that contains half a million people’s anonymised health and genetic information, may be used to answer questions about coronavirus. Becca Muir asks, are the biopolitics of these databases being ignored?

  • The stranded Indian crew members on board MSC Grandiosa, docked in Italy at present (Al Jazeera)

    Abandoned at Sea: Sailors and COVID-19

    Laleh Khalili, author of Sinews of War and Trade, reports on the over 100,000 sailors who are quarantined on their ships, unable to return home or access adequate medical care.

  • COVID-19 and The limits of Bolsonarism

    COVID-19 and The limits of Bolsonarism

    Brazilian President, Jair Bolsonaro, has continuously underplayed the coronavirus crisis, calling it nothing but 'sniffles' but as the death rises, Matheus Lock explains how and why the pandemic reveals the flaws within his leadership that may prove fatal.

  • A Communist Party rally calling for relief for the unemployed, San Francisco, circa 1930

    What Endures of the Romance of American Communism

    Today, the idea of socialism is peculiarly alive, especially among young people in the United States, in a way it has not been for decades. Socialists today must build their own, unaffiliated version of how to achieve a more just world, from the bottom up. It is my hope that Romance of American Communism, telling the story of how it was done some sixty or seventy years ago, can act as a guide to those similarly stirred today.