Acts, affects, calls
What art accomplishes in performing politics is to govern (placing beings into play with one another) bodies through affects. This is to realize that building broader coalitions and involving more...
View ArticleThe Arab Spring and the changing balance of global power
From an empirical-analytical point of view, what has happened in the Middle East and North Africa since Mohammed Bouazizi died? This is not an opinion piece, but an assessment of underlying factors...
View ArticleDesigned conflict territories
As the traditional role of the commons is lost to proprietary, securitised technology and authoritarian control, could designed conflict territories provide a radically different social platform where...
View ArticleFallujah revisited
Saudi Arabia’s virulently sectarian geo-policies are behind the resurgence of Al Qaida in Iraq. Iraq, more than two years after the US withdrawal, and nearly a decade after the US forces ousted Al...
View ArticleThe BRICS of collapse? Why emerging economies need a different development model
They have pursued GDP growth with little or no investment in human, social and natural capital. This does not bode well for the future of the world economy. Ever since the investment bank Goldman Sachs...
View ArticleThe Swiss vote to curb immigration, and what it means for Europe
On February 9, Swiss voters narrowly approved the reintroduction of quotas on immigration, damaging Swiss-EU relations in the process. Why did the Swiss vote this way? Does it have anything to do with...
View ArticlePolitical violence and state repression in Egypt
The level of political violence and state repression is set to increase over the coming years in Egypt. The slogan, “Egypt is fighting terrorism” is only a short-term remedy, diverting attention away...
View ArticleThe Banking Reform Act is rearranging the deck chairs on the neoliberal Titanic
A new report from the Centre for Labour and Social Studies highlights the failure of the Banking Reform Act to deal with any of the problems at the core of the 2007/8 collapse. Here, its author...
View ArticleThe Scots referendum debate could do without the vitriol
Most English appear to have little interest either way. Beyond the London bubble there really is little need for anger or resentment.Some nationalist comments on Scottish independence come laced with a...
View ArticleShadow banking, or why black holes are important in the global financial system
The shadow banking sector is now integral to the global financial system. Its architects are constantly seeking to evade oversight and control through the use of offshore accounting and forbidding...
View ArticleNorth Korea: elite shame, world test
A credible United Nations report on North Korea demands a humane and practical response to its people's degradation, says Kerry Brown.The United Nations report on conditions in North Korea published on...
View ArticleClimate politics: a melting glacier...
A new political tone on climate change in Britain is matched by a breakthrough in understanding the retreat of tropical glaciers. The great floods across parts of southern England may have abated, but...
View ArticleWhat is the fifth estate?
For the first time since 1848, a renewed Europe from the bottom up is possible: with the new social coalitions of the Fifth Estate. ‘A spectre is haunting Europe’: the spectre of the Fifth Estate,...
View ArticleGovernment brushes aside NHS Free Trade Treaty Concerns
MPs raise concerns about the impact the forthcoming trade treaty, TTIP, will have on the NHS - but Minster Without Portfolio Ken Clarke says it will make no difference.The government refused to exempt...
View ArticleBuy low, sell low: the secret to a healthier economy
To raise the quality of life, we must lower the cost of living for one another, and that’s what ‘buy low, sell low’ economics has to offer. This is the fourth article in our series on the role of money...
View ArticleFour reasons for throwing down a gauntlet to El Sisi
With increasing workers strikes, gas shortages and daily power cuts in addition to a dwindling economy and tourism industry, Egypt’s presidential hopefuls, including Sisi, should be aware that using...
View ArticlePodcast: 2014 matters: poverty, power and inequality in Scotland and a...
What would Scottish independence mean for global justice? A panel came together in Dundee to discuss what the referendum means for Scotland's place in the world.OurKingdom needs to raise £4000 to...
View ArticleThe birth pains of Scottish democracy and the anguish of ‘posh Scotland’
Hugo Rifkind has called on posh Scots to speak out in the independence debate, but it's not their voices that are missing.Many strange things will be written about Scotland this year. Some will be...
View ArticlePreserving policy space in an independent Scotland
Last week’s attempts at arm-twisting Scotland over sterling and European Union membership have backfired. But an independent Scotland should want no part in either surrendering monetary sovereignty or...
View ArticleUnderstanding and confronting financialisation
The growth of finance over the last forty years has changed capitalism profoundly. It is time for its critics to grasp the nature and significance of these changes. Only then will the supremacy of...
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