As the showdown in Wisconsin demonstrates, progressives must embrace the government workers’ struggle as our own—or else.
Is the Middle East swinging back into a new liberal period?
In the first English translation of a cri de coeur that has topped bestseller lists for months in France, the 93-year-old hero of the French Resistance urges a new generation to renew the struggle for social justice.
With its job-killing, union-busting, women’s rights-crushing budget bills, is the right-wing caliphate already here?
Nick Cullather’s The Hungry World teaches us that US agricultural assistance in Asia during the cold war was a Green Counterrevolution.
With Examined Lives, James Miller offers a serious and readable study of the relationship between philosophy and life conduct.
Martin Creed and Gabriel Orozco reduce the artistic gesture to the smallest effective intervention into reality.
It’s not only bad politics for states to use budget crises to bust unions—it’s also bad economics.
Egyptians’ aspirations to democracy and social justice will depend on workers’ willingness to take to the streets.
In his new book, Evgeny Morozov calls on the US government to reassess its technology sector, which is now yoked to the geopolitics of several pro-democracy uprisings.
Far from being a monolith, the Ikhwan, as it is known in Arabic, is well scored by demographic and ideological fault lines.
Legendary in the worlds of both art and literature, Marjorie Perloff w...