
Regulate!
Lynsey Hanley talks to Ellie Harrison about her Bus Regulation: The Musical, a travelling spectacular on how integrated public transport was destroyed in Britain and how it can be rebuilt.
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Miriam Pensack is a writer, editor, and doctoral candidate in Latin American history at New York University.
Lynsey Hanley talks to Ellie Harrison about her Bus Regulation: The Musical, a travelling spectacular on how integrated public transport was destroyed in Britain and how it can be rebuilt.
The attempted coup in Brazil that followed Lula’s victory was the culmination of the surreal world of Bolsonarismo, in which the country’s history was warped into unrecognisability.
The 75th anniversary of the Nakba marks the expulsion of over 750,000 Palestinians from their homeland in 1948. Decades later, the fight against dispossession continues.
We sit down with Omar Barghouti – co-founder of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement – to discuss why justice for Palestinians can only be won through isolating Israel on the world stage.
Nearing the end of WWII, armed forces stationed in Egypt established their own parliament to demand a socialist transformation of Britain’s economy. On VE Day, we republish an article from a ‘Minister’ of the Cairo Forces Parliament.
In ‘Mussolini’s Grandchildren: Fascism in Contemporary Italy,’ David Broder provides an incisive account of how the Italian far-right reconstructed itself following its defeat in World War II and paved the way for Il Duce’s political heirs to take power.
The Tories’ hammering in the local elections is more to do with voter disdain for the government than any enthusiasm for Labour. Starmer must produce a vision to inspire the country if he wants to be the next prime minister.
If you want to understand the baffling popularity of the Royal Family, one place to start is the multimedia imperial modernist spectacle of the 1953 coronation.
Radical suffragette Sylvia Pankhurst was born on this day in 1882. To mark the occasion, we republish her essay on the meaning of socialism.
Robert Tressell, author of ‘The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists,’ was born 153 years ago. His writing left an indelible mark on the socialist movement – but the man himself was almost forgotten by history.
Karl Marx was born on this day in 1818. His work remains as relevant as ever.
In a new exhibition at the Barbican, the communist artist Alice Neel’s humane portraits capture the fighters, victims and figures of America’s twentieth-century turmoil.
Israel’s relentless expansion of settlement and ethnic cleansing exposes the reality for Palestinians — the Nakba never really ended.
“As long as the struggle of the workers against the ruling class continues, May Day will be the yearly expression of our demands.” Rosa Luxemburg on the meaning of International Workers’ Day.
We remember the first major rally marking International Workers’ Day in England – when hundreds of thousands turned out in Hyde Park in 1890 to demand an eight-hour day.
The late historian Eric Hobsbawm recounts the history of International Workers’ Day.
The last year has seen workers in Britain and across the world rise up to demand justice – but we can’t beat the ruling class without unity.
In the past month, university bosses have threatened to withhold the pay of workers observing a marking boycott. These draconian acts – intended to break their workers’ spirit – have only emboldened them.
Nobody should die at work – but the government’s refusal to remove asbestos is killing more than five thousand people a year. On International Workers’ Memorial Day, we should remember them by fighting for a system that values workers more than profits.
Antonio Gramsci died on this day in 1937. We remember his revolutionary life and his contributions to the struggle against capitalism.