
Vol 7 No 2
Summer 2023Lulismo’s Past and Present
Lula’s return to the Brazilian presidency opens up the possibility of deepening democracy and expanding the scope of egalitarian advance. I argue that he can in fact pursue expansionary fiscal and redistributive policies that would improve the conditions of his political base.
The Jobs and Freedom Strategy
Even though it is scarcely remembered today, Bayard Rustin and A. Philip Randolph laid out a path forward for the civil rights movement — the Jobs and Freedom Strategy — that bears striking relevance to the present.
Federalism and Class Struggle
American federalism is often touted as a source of local democratic engagement, political innovation, and responsive public policy. But in practice, the American states have served not as “laboratories of democracy” but as laboratories of autocracy and inequality that effectively stymie social reform, fragment social protection, and undermine social citizenship.
The Class Politics of Race
Review of Not So Black and White: A History of Race From White Supremacy to Identity Politics by Kenan Malik (Hurst, 2023)
War and Democratic Struggle
Can wars foster democracy? Many scholars have argued that repression radicalizes labor. But while Britain’s reformist labor movement saw further incremental democratization, its more revolutionary Italian counterpart saw democracy crushed. In a recent book, Elizabeth Kier argues that radicalism ignited a backlash leading to Fascism, but the result had more to do with the persistent power of an elite minority.
“Settler Colonialism” Can’t Fully Explain Our World
Settler colonialism is often described as a singular, transnational mode of domination. But it’s impossible to understand colonialism without political economy and material interests.
How Jean-Luc Godard Embodied Revolutionary Cinema
What kind of revolutionary filmmaker was Jean-Luc Godard? This is not an easy question to answer in periods when the divide between art and politics is hard to bridge in practice.
We Can’t Change the World Without Focusing on Class
In No Politics but Class Politics, Walter Benn Michaels and Adolph Reed show how an identity politics that obscures class politics and ignores economic inequality only makes the many miseries around us worse.
Can John Rawls’s Philosophy Save Liberal Democracy?
The ideas of John Rawls, perhaps the greatest political philosopher of the 20th century, have much to teach the Left. But Rawls’s theories failed to grapple adequately with the fundamental obstacles capitalism imposes to realizing a just society.
America Broke Up Iraq Into Sectarian Pieces
A Stranger in Your Own City is a powerful account of America’s invasion and occupation of Iraq and its catastrophic effects on the Iraqi people. Does the Tishreen uprising mark the beginning of the end of Iraq’s sectarian political structure?
Democracy Is the Answer to Privatization
The case against the neoliberal privatization of public institutions is based on the harmful effects it has on workers and citizens. But the case for public ownership needs more: the legitimacy of democratic governance.