
Polluting Public Culture
As more arts institutions cut their ties with BP, the British Museum has yet to follow suit – but we need culture that isn't stained with big oil's profits.
As more arts institutions cut their ties with BP, the British Museum has yet to follow suit – but we need culture that isn't stained with big oil's profits.
This year marks 60 years since the US began its blockade of Cuba. It is economic warfare designed to collectively punish a people for their independence – and it must come to an end.
The cost of living crisis hitting Britain today isn't just an economic problem – by forcing millions of people to go without heat and food, it will also have a devastating impact on public health.
Today marks a year since Sarah Everard was kidnapped and murdered while walking home – and instead of dealing with the violence and bigotry endemic in the police, the state has doubled down.
Cleaners who kept London trains safe during the pandemic are paid so poorly that some are homeless and others in appalling debt – now they’re striking against profiteering bosses to demand a living wage.
When Putin invaded Ukraine, Britain's government pledged to do whatever it could to support the victims of war – but its failure to follow Europe in waiving visas for refugees shows that those commitments were little more than words.
This week, Grace talks to Max Lawson, Head of Inequality Policy at Oxfam, about why inequality increased so much during Covid, how it's affecting our democracies, and what we need to do about it.
By advocating a No-Fly Zone in Ukraine, the commentariat is demanding that we roll the dice on nuclear war – the latest reminder of just how dangerous our warmongering media truly is.
Western sanctions that drive ordinary Russians into poverty would be both wrong and ineffective – it’s time to hit Putin’s real base of power: Russia’s 500 richest oligarchs.
The latest IPCC report lays out the devastating impacts of climate change that lie just around the corner. They can't be stopped by half measures – the only way to avert disaster is to change the system.
Over one million workers in Britain are now on zero-hour contracts. Their proliferation has never been about 'flexibility' – it's about keeping workers insecure and wages low.
Glasgow's Radiophrenia music and sound festival evokes a public broadcast modernism – but also risks being trapped inside an experimental ghetto.