Why We Need an Eco-Socialist Movement
The relationship between environmentalists and socialists has at times been a fraught one – but if the fight against climate disaster is to be won, we’ll have to work together.
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Raven Hart is co-founder of the Bristol Cooperative Alliance, an organisation that aims to promote a decentralised economy that empowers local communities and facilitates democratic self-determination.
The relationship between environmentalists and socialists has at times been a fraught one – but if the fight against climate disaster is to be won, we’ll have to work together.
New Home Office policy threatens to punish the foreign homeless with deportation, but Labour councils in London, Oxford and Manchester are pushing back – and have vowed not to comply.
The late John le Carré was the best novelist of the Cold War. By no means of the Left, his portrayals of the British security establishment nonetheless offer an enduring insight into the politics of the ruling class.
Unpaid carers have faced impossible pressures during the Covid-19 pandemic but have been disgracefully abandoned by their government – and forced to survive on just £67.25 per week.
From the 1960s to the ’80s, the Asian Youth Movements organised against racists and the far-right on Britain’s streets. Speaking to Tribune, the activists behind those efforts call for that flame to be reignited.
As the Rolls-Royce strike runs into Christmas, workers are worried about more than their jobs – they fear for the community that would be left behind by the latest devastating chapter of deindustrialisation.
An open letter to the Labour Party leadership from MPs, Lords, trade union leaders and NEC representatives calls for an end to “attacks on party democracy, legitimate discussion and the recent wave of suspensions.”
A decade ago today, Mohamed Bouazizi set himself alight in a Tunisian market and catalysed what’s become known as the ‘Arab Spring’. In Tunisia, at least, his legacy endures.
The 2020 Marmot Review shows the impact of health inequality in England’s Covid deaths. Challenging it will require a new kind of health policy – one that looks beyond the NHS to broader social ills.
Yesterday, Liverpool Walton CLP secretary Alan Gibbons was the latest target of Labour’s mass suspension of socialists. Today he has a message: members make the party, not bureaucrats – and they will fight for their rights.
The government’s review into the outdated 2005 Gambling Act offers a chance to challenge the predatory gambling industry – but first, Labour must tackle its own pro-bookie lobby.
In the 1920s, socialist architect Josef Frank designed homes to maximise freedom – informed by an understanding that workers need the space to separate their work from the rest of their lives.
Last month, Rudy Kurniawan was released after seven years in prison for passing off cheap fakes as fine wine – a crime punished, above all, for exposing ruling class pretensions about taste.
This week the government issued legal threats against a London council for closing schools – showing that it values profits more than the lives of workers, students and their families.
A new study shows that exploitative working conditions have severe impacts on mental health – and makes the case for empowering workers through unions and workplace democracy.
Faced with a reckless government that disregarded teacher and student health, unions like the NEU set out to fight back – and, in the process, built grassroots organisation that empowers workers.
India’s government is trying to force through a corporate takeover of its agricultural sector – but their plans have met fierce resistance from the country’s farmers, who are refusing to hand over their livelihoods.
When Thatcher’s government inherited the emerging riches of North Sea oil, it pioneered ‘carbon neoliberalism’ – a model of managing public goods for private interests that soon became the norm.
This week’s House of Lords vote to keep the NHS out of future trade deals was a victory for the hundreds of thousands of people who fought plans to put public healthcare on the international market.
When Thatcher’s government inherited the emerging riches of North Sea oil, it pioneered ‘carbon neoliberalism’ — a model of managing public goods for private interests that soon became the norm.