The story of how thousands of Catholics and Protestants united to challenge poverty and unemployment in Belfast, Ireland.
Julian West, looking backwards from 2050, tries to understand why the world and his family have fallen apart.
Focusing on the processes of accumulation, concentration, and centralisation of capital, Rubens Sawaya traces the transnationalisation of capital and its impact on Latin America and Brazil
Risto Alapuro, through a comparative and historical study of the Finnish revolution, provides a pertinent account of how upheavals in powerful countries impact smaller countries.
Suvin’s ?X-Ray’ of Socialist Yugoslavia offers an indispensable overview of a unique and often overlooked twentieth-century socialism
Far from being regulated by them, Corporations have outgrown national borders and the states meant to keep them in check.
In this provocative and compelling work Shourideh Molavi documents the legal plight of Palestinians living inside of Israel.
Philosophically engaging, and practically oriented, this book asks whether philosophic clarity can account for effective revolutionary organizational practice.
In this incisive critique of corruption throughout higher education, Schwartz draws on extensive research into New Jersey’s University of Medicine.
Vilson, a teacher from an urban school composed of black and poor youth, challenges racism and inequality in the classroom.
A clear, evocative, and well-documented refutation of the idea that overpopulation is at the root of many environmental problems.