Vol 9 No 1

Spring 2025
  • Philip Rocco

Why the Democrats Are So Useless

The Democratic Party’s transformation into a network of policy clientele organizations has left it incapacitated as an opposition party. These groups, which lack strong mass-membership bases and sources of structural power, have struggled to respond to Donald Trump’s attack on the state. Turning the tide will require transcending the politics of programmatic liberalism.

  • Andre Pagliarini

Lula’s Popular Front

This article analyzes Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s embrace of a broad front against far-right forces associated with former president Jair Bolsonaro. It explores Lula’s ideologically expansive 2022 presidential campaign and his challenges governing amid partisan fragmentation and argues that broad coalitions, while effective electorally, complicate progressive governance in polarized democracies.

  • Vanessa Chishti

The Modi Phenomenon

This article examines the political economy of Narendra Modi’s ascent to power, focusing on the pivotal role played by Indian big capital in the transition from Indian National Congress to Bharatiya Janata Party governance. It argues that the defection of leading corporate actors from the former party to the latter was not merely a political realignment but a structural shift in India’s post-liberalization regime. Since Modi’s election, neoliberal reforms have accelerated, deepening the state’s alignment with capital while marginalizing the political influence of labor.

  • Jeff Goodwin

The Fantasy of Revolution

Socialist revolutions have all but disappeared during the past half century, even if they remain a remote possibility in authoritarian countries with corrupt, long-standing autocrats. By contrast, the achievements of broad social and democratic rights have rendered insurrectionary politics a strategic cul-de-sac in advanced capitalist countries. The era of revolutions is likely over.

  • Nicholas Vrousalis

Technofeudalism Is Just Capitalism

Cédric Durand and Yanis Varoufakis have recently argued that the capitalist mode of production is being replaced by a more exploitative and less productive mode of production that they call techno-feudalism. But their case depends on implausible claims about the constitution of classes, the status of online platform users, and the sources of rent extraction. Capitalism is alive and well.

Review

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Culture Can’t Explain the Arab Revolts

Violence and Representation in the Arab Uprising shows how the Arab revolts empowered democratic citizenship. But a focus on vibrant cultural creativity is no substitute for concrete analysis of political agency and economic structure.