Skip to main content

Charlie Hebdo and the Limits of the Republic

Arthur Asseraf Jadaliyya
It is bitterly ironic that Muslims are being asked to prove that they believe in the same values from which they were historically excluded. The Republic has always had a darker side, and the civil liberties that are now idealized emerged in a colonial context where they excluded the Republic’s Muslim subjects.

Bringing Labor Back

Chris Maisano Jacobin
Anti-union forces can taste the blood in the water, and their offensive is only getting broader. Between efforts to pass right-to-work laws at the state and local levels and legal challenges like Harris v. Quinn and Friedrichs v. California Teachers Association, the legal-institutional basis of US trade unions is being dismantled. And once that’s lost, it will probably be impossible to bring unions back as they were before.

Caring in the City

Johanna Brenner Jacobin
Ending the exploitation of urban care workers requires radically democratic alternatives that go beyond the rhetoric of "work-life balance."

Je Suis Charlie - But I Have Other Names as Well

Victor Grossman Portside
I cannot help thinking that there are far more too many very bloody, extremely wealthy criminals at large in the world, whose actions are rarely reported on, unless marital or extra-marital. Action based on a true belief in press freedom can be mercilessly punished, as it was learned by Julian Assange, Chelsea Manning, Edward Snowden - or Mumia Abu-Jamal!

Authoritarianism, Class Warfare and the Advance of Neoliberal Austerity Policies

Henry A. Giroux Truthout
Both neoliberal-driven governments and authoritarian societies share one important factor: They care more about consolidating power in the hands of the political, corporate and financial elite than they do about investing in the future of young people and expanding the benefits of the social contract and common good.

When History Knocks

Sam Gindin Jacobin
Naomi Klein rightly blames capitalism for climate change. But she doesn't go far enough.

The True Cost of Teach For America's Impact on Urban Schools

Rachel M. Cohen The American Prospect
Why are school districts paying millions in "finder's fees" to an organization that places people without education degrees to teach in urban schools—even where applications from veteran teachers abound?