Blog

Jamaica’s Christmas Rebellion

On Christmas Day 1831, 60,000 enslaved Africans in Jamaica rose up against their masters – the largest uprising ever in the British West Indies, and a milestone on the road to abolition a few years later.

Do Unto Others

At its most radical, Christian teaching is a condemnation of a world exploited by the rich – and an injunction to fight for the liberation of the world's poor and oppressed.

How Chile Beat the Far-Right

Gabriel Boric's landmark victory in this month's Chilean election was built on the foundations of the 2019 protest movement – but also showed a Left capable of building alliances beyond its traditional strongholds.

How Chile’s Left Won

Gabriel Boric’s victory in Chile is a vindication of the mass movement which took to the streets in 2019 – and points towards a country ready to bury Pinochet’s legacy for good.

Remembering Greg Tate

Celebrated critic Greg Tate passed away earlier this month. His music writing contained multitudes, mixing together politics, poetry and theory – and earned him renown as the 'godfather of hip-hop journalism'.

The West Midlands’ Lost Labour

Photographer Janine Wiedel's 1979 series 'Vulcan's Forge', now back in the West Midlands for the first time in decades, captured the region's traditional workplaces on the eve of deindustrialisation.