Blog

The Housing Crisis Is Bad for Your Health

One quarter of all privately-rented homes in England fail to meet basic health standards. The problem can't be solved by piecemeal reforms – only grassroots tenant organising can fight landlord neglect.

50 Years of Britain’s Bad Drug Policy

On this day in 1971, Britain adopted the Misuse of Drugs Act. Half a century later, drug-related deaths are at a record high – it's time to accept that the prohibitive approach is harmful and demand something different.

How the Thurrock Bin Strike Won

In the midst of a pandemic, Thurrock's bin workers found themselves facing council cuts that would have left them £4,000 a year worse off – so they organised, went on strike and beat the bosses.

The Danish Dilemma

Denmark is one of the few European states to elect a social-democratic government in recent years – but its mix of progressive economics and anti-immigrant policies offers a stark warning about the years ahead.

When Localism Is Anti-Social

Recent campaigns against council housing and Low Traffic Neighbourhoods in London are a reminder of the dangers of localist rhetoric – and how it can be weaponised against progressive policies.

UCL Must Cut the Rent

Sick of being exploited by profit-driven universities, student rent strikers are organising for change – at UCL their demands are a full refund of this year's rent and a rent freeze for the next five years.