Fra Socialist Review nr. 366 |
Forfatter: Titel |
Nr. |
Side |
Udgivet |
Om |
Content |
366 |
3 |
feb 12 |
|
Francis Newman: Exhibition: Social fabric (Iniva, Rivington Place,. London) |
366 |
2 |
feb 12 |
|
This multi-disciplined collaborative show, comprised of installations, textiles, objects, text, photographs, videos, drawings, paintings and watercolours explores artistic responses to the relationship between exploiter and exploited. |
|
Mark Thomas: Editorial |
366 |
3 |
feb 12 |
|
The huge demonstrations that marked the first anniversary of the outbreak of the Egyptian uprising have given the revolution a new impetus. |
|
Estelle Cooch: Europe's zombie banks |
366 |
4 |
feb 12 |
|
Estelle Cooch on the why the latest bailout won't solve the Eurozone crisis. |
|
Simon Assaf: Anger in Benghazi |
366 |
4 |
feb 12 |
|
Libya has erupted once again in protest. In January an angry crowd of some 2,000 people stormed the offices of the ruling National Transitional Council (NTC) in Benghazi, the birthplace of the revolution. |
|
Jack Farmer: The spirit of Occupy |
366 |
6 |
feb 12 |
|
John Sinha and Amy Leather are socialists who have been part of the occupation of St Paul's since it began. They spoke to Jack Farmer about the Occupy movement. |
|
Sarah Ensor: In my opinion: Implanting oppression |
366 |
7 |
feb 12 |
|
Sarah Ensor on the breast implant scandal. |
|
Letters: Feedback |
366 |
8 |
feb 12 |
|
Bolivia: The reality of power -- Comedy: Punch Jim Davidson -- Computer games: Not just a game -- ACTA against this! |
|
Baba Aye: Letter from ...: Letter from Nigeria |
366 |
9 |
feb 12 |
|
Baba Aye reports on the millions who took to the streets in the largest and most intense strikes that Nigeria has ever seen. |
|
Phil Marfleet: The generals, the Islamists and the Egyptian Revolution |
366 |
10 |
feb 12 |
|
After the recent election Egypt's parliament is dominated by Islamists, especially representatives of the Muslim Brotherhood. But, argues Phil Marfleet, the Brotherhood faces immense pressure from Egyptians to deliver real change and break with the military. |
|
Talat Ahmed: Racism: a very British institution |
366 |
13 |
feb 12 |
|
The conviction of Gary Dobson and David Norris for the racist murder of Stephen Lawrence was a moment to celebrate for all anti-racists. But, argues Talat Ahmed, institutional racism still lurks at the heart of the British state. |
|
Brian Richardson: Stephen Lawrence case: It wasn't the Daily Mail wot won it! |
366 |
15 |
feb 12 |
|
The Daily Mail has claimed that it drove forward the campaign for justice for Stephen Lawrence. Brian Richardson sets the record straight and argues that the real pressure for justice came from below. |
|
Julie Sherry: Pressure at the top |
366 |
16 |
feb 12 |
|
The mass strike on 30 November struck a heavy blow against the government and its cuts agenda. But since then some union leaders have put the breaks on. Julie Sherry assesses the role of the trade union bureaucracy and looks at how workers can increase the pressure for more strikes. |
|
Sarah Ensor + Mark Thomas: Revolution, sanctions and US imperialism |
366 |
18 |
feb 12 |
|
Sarah Ensor and Mark L Thomas spoke to Tariq Ali who gives his take on the revolutions and rebellions in Tunisia, Egypt and Syria, the threat of war with Iran and US imperialism after Iraq. |
|
Jack Farmer: The myth of crony capitalism |
366 |
21 |
feb 12 |
|
Those who suggest that we are witnessing a crisis of "crony capitalism", rather than capitalism itself, are wrong, argues Jack Farmer. |
|
Colin Wilson: Sex and the German Revolution |
366 |
22 |
feb 12 |
|
As part of LGBT history month, Colin Wilson looks at the how the German Revolution of 1918 led to significant new freedoms for lesbians and gays, and the role played by Communists. |
|
Gareth Jenkins: Review: Dickens the radical |
366 |
29 |
feb 12 |
|
The great Victorian novelist Charles Dickens was born 200 years ago this month. Gareth Jenkins looks back at his life and work. |
|