ellie-whittaker

4358 Articles by:

Ellie Whittaker

Ellie Woolstencroft is an activist with Labour for a Green New Deal.

Remembering the Women’s Pit Camps

In January 1993, women from mining communities set up camps at seven mines facing closure. After a year-long struggle, the pits closed – but not before the camps united supporters around the country.

A Mother’s Covid Nightmare

Kara Bryan’s daughter ended up in hospital with Covid-related Multi-system Inflammatory Syndrome. Here, she recounts her story – and explains her fears that schools across England are reopening too early.

Yes, the British Media Is Racist

The Society of Editors’ claim that the British press isn’t racist was rightly mocked – but it’s only one small indicator of the deep denial that exists about the role our media plays in demonising the oppressed.

Rupert Murdoch at 90

On the media mogul’s 90th birthday, many will focus on Rupert Murdoch as a nasty individual – but he represents an even nastier system: the billionaire-owned media.

The Fashion Debt Trap

Founded in Sweden, Klarna is a bank that has spread like a pink rash over the fashion industry – but its ‘buy now, pay later’ approach is digging a cash-strapped generation deeper into personal debt.

Covid’s Graduate Jobs Crisis

The pandemic has seen unemployment explode among young graduates, and no amount of polishing CVs will solve the crisis – the only path to decent work for this generation is political and economic change.

Red Library: Pamphlets

A serious crisis is always a good time for short, sharp, and prophetic pamphlets. The Covid-19 disaster has especially spurred works dealing both with how the crisis has unfolded, and ways activists can survive it.

Something in the Air

A new book on modern architecture and climate researches the passive cooling strategies that immediately preceded the age of air-conditioning. In the age of accelerating climate change, can we learn anything from them?

Repetitive Beats

The Design Museum’s show Electronic showcases how a once-revolutionary music has become bourgeois and clichéd, but contains scattered hints at what was once possible.

The NHS’s Winter of Discontent

Even before the pandemic hit, health workers warned that hospitals were struggling to cope. Now, as they fight through one of the darkest periods in living memory, those at the frontline are increasingly angry at the government’s failures.