The notion of uneven and combined
development (U&CD), introduced by Leon Trotsky in his assessment of the
Russian political economy and the possibilities of transformation toward
communism in the early 20th century, has gained increasing attention
within International Relations. In this blog post, I want to engage critically
with the recent book How The West Came To Rule (Pluto Press,
2015) by Alexander Anievas and Kerem Nişancioğlu, which draws extensively on
U&CD in its analysis of the emergence and spread of capitalism.
Sunday, 18 December 2016
Wednesday, 30 November 2016
The Future of UK-China Relations post-Brexit - China as a Hope Project
With Brexit on the horizon, the UK is
currently in search for alternative trade agreements, not only with European
countries, but also other economies around the world. The emerging market of
China plays a key role in this strategy. In this blog post, I will assess the
potential and implications of future UK – China relations.
Photo by Sergeant Paul Shaw LBIPP/MOD |
Sunday, 13 November 2016
Imperialism in the Twenty-First Century
Despite the ongoing ramifications of the
global economic crisis of 2007/2008, capitalism continues to reap super
profits. In his fascinating book Imperialism in the Twenty-First Century:
Globalization, Super-Exploitation and Capitalism’s Final Crisis (Monthly Review
Press, 2016) John Smith unravels the underlying dynamics of global capitalism. By
tracing the production of the T-shirt, the cup
of coffee, and the iPhone, he demonstrates how these generate the transfer of
enormous surplus value from countries in the Global South to transnational
corporations in the North. In this blog post, I will outline several of
the key contributions of this book and offer a number of critical reflections.
Thursday, 20 October 2016
The Struggle of organising Migrant Workers
With
precarious forms of work increasingly also emerging within the core of
industrialised countries in the global economy, the issue of how to organise
migrant workers has become an ever more pressing concern. In his talk at
Nottingham University on Tuesday, 17 October, Aziz Choudry reported on related
challenges, drawing on two of his recently co-edited books, Unfree
Labour? Struggles of Migrant and Immigrant Workers in Canada (Oakland,
CA: PM Press, 2016), together with Adrian Smith, and Just
Work? Migrant Workers’ Struggles Today (London: Pluto Press, 2015),
together with Mondli Hlatshwayo. In this blog post, I will draw out a couple of
key insights resulting from Choudry’s analysis of a large range of different
forms of migrant labour organising.
Thursday, 13 October 2016
Proposals for Alternatives to Neo-liberalism: SIGTUR's Futures Commission.
As a first step, the Futures Commission has now published the booklet Challenging Corporate Capital: Creating an Alternative to Neo-liberalism. It includes proposals for labour and tax justice, a fair trade regime, a democracy-driven, public sector transformation as well as a response to the climate crisis. In this blog post, I will provide brief overviews of the contributions as well as links to the larger versions of the papers, freely available on the website of the Rosa Luxemburg Foundation in Johannesburg/South Africa.
Wednesday, 5 October 2016
Stretching to make ends meet – The struggle for a Living Wage at Nottingham University.
Inequality
in Britain is on the rise. Deteriorating employment conditions and low wages
are one of the main reasons. In this post, I will report on the LivingWage/Anti-casualisation campaign at Nottingham University, demanding a
living wage and secure employment for all employees at the university. The campaign group consists of a broad
alliance of the three trade unions on campus, Unison, Unite and UCU, together
with Nottingham Citizens as well as the Labour Students society, UoN Feminists,
Socialist Students, the Young Greens, the Left Society and the Palestinian
Society.
Wednesday, 28 September 2016
Standing Up For Education!
On
Tuesday, 20 September, Standing Up For
Education, the latest publication by Spokesman Books, was launched in the Five Leaves Bookshop in Nottingham.
It provides an excellent compilation of insights from different perspectives
including students, teachers, trade unionists and parents into the devastating processes of
destruction of primary and secondary education. Emphasising the situation in
Nottingham, the volume provides a snapshot into processes affecting also other
local communities across the UK. In this blog post, I will report on the
contributions by four of the authors, who were present at the book launch.
Monday, 12 September 2016
Towards Labour Centred Development
In
2014, Ben Selwyn published the book The Global Development Crisis (Polity, 2014), in which he critically
engages with market-led and state-led developmental models alike. Importantly,
he puts forward the novel concept of labour centred development. In this blog
post, I will discuss the main contributions of this remarkable book and explore
further the possibilities of labour centred development.
Monday, 29 August 2016
Chinese labour in the global economy: capitalist exploitation and strategies of resistance.
China is generally regarded as the new economic
powerhouse in the global political economy. Some even talk of an emerging
power, which may in time replace the US as the global economy’s hegemon. And
yet, there is a dark underside to this ‘miracle’ in the form of workers’ long
hours, low pay and lack of welfare benefits. Increasing levels of inequality
have gone hand in hand with widespread working conditions characterised by
super-exploitation. Nevertheless, Chinese workers have not simply accepted
these conditions of exploitation. They have started to fight back. In a new
special issue of the journal Globalizations, co-edited by Chun-Yi Lee
and myself, the contributors have analysed these various forms of resistance by
Chinese workers and the way they are organised. In this blog post, I will
provide a brief overview of the contents of this special issue.
Sunday, 21 August 2016
Fighting for the heart and soul of Labour!
Photo by Jason |
Tuesday, 16 August 2016
Super-exploitation and resistance: different forms of workers protests in China.
China is
frequently considered to be an example of successful developmental catch-up.
And yet, the country’s impressive growth rates are to a large extent based on
the super-exploitation of its workforce expressed in long working hours, low
wages, and a general lack of basic welfare benefits such as medical insurance
and work-injury insurance (Chan
and Selden, 2014, p. 606). In our recently published
article ‘Exploitation and resistance: a comparative analysis of the Chinese
cheap labour electronics and high-value added IT sectors’, published in the journal Globalizations and freely accessible online,
Chun-Yi Lee and I compare the electronics sector in the area of Shenzhen, based
on cheap labour assembling goods for export, with the IT
sector in the area of Shanghai, relying
on a more skilled workforce manufacturing high-value added goods. It is asked in what way these rather different
locations within the global political economy condition the form and contents
of resistance in these two sectors.
Saturday, 9 July 2016
The Hidden Cost of Everyday Low Prices
Monday, 4 July 2016
Neoliberalism’s Exploitation of Women Workers: the true price of our clothing.
Neoliberalism
has faced intense scrutiny over the years from Trade Unionists and Marxists
alike for its exploitation of workers and insistence of an economic ‘trickle
down’ effect that has yet to materialise. When you look closer, however,
another troubling aspect of this industry emerges. Again and again, it seems to
be women who are left behind by this system. In many countries in the global
South, women are drawn into employment in the lowest paid and most undervalued
work in the global economy at the end of Global Commodity Chains in the
manufacturing, fresh produce and garment industries. In this guest post, Zoe Kemp analyses the plight of female
workers in the Bangladeshi textile sector.
Monday, 27 June 2016
What a victory for the ‘internationalist’ pro-Brexit left!
All
European citizens have just been stripped of their European citizenship rights
in Northern Ireland and Britain. Hence, no right to vote in local
elections, no European social rights (e.g. no European Health Insurance Card), and
no right to be treated equally anymore. What a ‘success’ for the
‘internationalist’ pro-Brexit left of Britain and Ireland! As a result,
European migration to the UK will be reduced significantly. But note, I mean
student migration not labour migration. In this guest post, Roland Erne
assesses some of the implications of Brexit for EU nationals working in the UK.
Friday, 24 June 2016
Brexit and the rise of the nationalist right: Where next for the British left?
Photo by Rareclass |
My brother in
law cannot get a job in the warehouses, because these agencies favour Polish
immigrants.
All our
companies are owned by foreigners, German electricity company, French in the
water industry. I’d nationalise the whole lot’ (Local Resident in Beeston,
Nottingham/UK; 24 June 2016).
As
the Brexit vote sinks in, the first nationalist and xenophobic statements can
be heard on the streets. In this blog post, I am analysing the wider causes
underlying the Brexit vote and reflect on the struggles ahead. I will argue that
there have been two campaigns against increasing austerity and the destruction brought
about by global capitalist restructuring, the progressive left campaign around
the election of Jeremy Corbyn as leader of the Labour Party in the summer of
2015 and the predominantly right-wing Brexit campaign. Last night, the latter
won a significant victory, when 51.9 per cent of the people voting endorsed to
leave the EU against 48.1 per cent, who had voted to remain in the EU.
Tuesday, 24 May 2016
What position for the labour movement on the EU referendum?
On
Thursday, 23 June, a referendum will be held to decide whether Britain should leave or remain in the European Union. When Jacques Delors, then EU
Commission President, announced his vision of a social dimension for European
integration in the late 1980s, in the UK he won large parts of the British
trade unions over into a pro-EU position. Against the background of neo-liberal
restructuring by consecutive Conservative governments, social regulation at the
European level offered advances, which would have been impossible in a purely
domestic context. Is this situation still the case today?
Photo by Descrier |
In
this post, I will first assess the current state of affairs for social
policies in the EU. Then I will focus on the dangers of nationalism and
xenophobic reactions to migration, implied in a no-vote, before concluding in
the third section that the focus of the debate should be redirected on what kind
of EU we want, rather than the issue of further or less integration.
Monday, 16 May 2016
How The West Came To Rule – Celebrating the 10th anniversary of the Marxism Reading Group at Nottingham!
This
semester, the Marxism Reading Group of the Centre for the Study of Social andGlobal Justice (CSSGJ) in the School of Politics and IR at Nottingham
University will celebrate its 10th anniversary. In this blog post, I
will briefly outline the main purpose and achievements of the group over the
years. Moreover, I will provide information about our anniversary workshop on How The West Came To Rule, on 7 June 2016.
Sunday, 8 May 2016
Mobilising through Solidarity: the social clinic in Drama and the refugee crisis.
While the Syriza government had to submit to the dictate of the European Union in July 2015, the concrete resistance against austerity has continued unabated on the ground in Greece. In this blog post I will discuss the experiences of the social clinic Solidarity Community Clinic – Pharmacy of Drama (KIFA) in Drama and its recent efforts at helping refugees living in a camp close to town. I will draw on experiences and discussions with activists from a recent visit to this city in Northern Greece.
Wednesday, 27 April 2016
Killing TTIP - The struggle against corporate power!
While
Obama is visiting Europe to drum up support for the Transatlantic Trade and
Investment Partnership (TTIP), the 13th round of negotiations of the
treaty is currently taking place in the US. As John Hilary, the Executive
Director of War on Want and one of the key
initiators of the Stop-TTIP campaign in
Europe, declared, TTIP is not only important in itself covering the EU and US.
It is also significant, because it is regarded as a blueprint for all future trade deals. In this blog post, I will report on the key themes of his
public lecture at Nottingham University, delivered on 26 April.
Thursday, 21 April 2016
Towards principles of an alternative fair trade regime
Multilateral
Free Trade Agreements (FTAs), praised as engines of development by their
supporters, have experienced a revival recently in a number of multilateral negotiations
including the Transpacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA) and the Transatlantic
Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP). In this blog post, I will critically
discuss the record of FTAs and suggest potential key principles of an
alternative trade regime from a workers’ perspective, including one set of
principles around national sovereignty and another against the increasing structural power
of transnational capital. I will, thereby, draw on my freely downloadable paper
‘From
‘free trade’ to ‘fair trade’: proposals for joint labour demands towards an
alternative trade regime’, published by the Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung in Johannesburg/South Africa.
Thursday, 24 March 2016
In or Out? The UK and EU membership: Asking the wrong questions.
The
British public is gripped by the campaigns around the EU referendum and the
question of whether to stay in the EU or leave European integration behind. In
this blog post, I will argue from a left perspective that this debate asks the
wrong questions. EU membership is made into a big issue, while the real
problems in British society are not addressed.
Friday, 26 February 2016
The Corbyn Factor: What does it mean in practice?
When discussing the revitalisation of the Labour Party, many people
refer to the Corbyn Factor. And indeed, the rise of the left-wing, rebellious
back bencher Jeremy Corbyn to become the leader of the Labour Party, elected by
a clear majority of party members and sympathisers only a few months after the
party’s defeat in general elections in May 2015, has been an astonishing
development (see Corbyn’s
Campaign). In this blog post I will assess the dynamics of this development
in practice by comparing two local Labour Party meetings in the area of
Nottingham, one in Beeston North in September 2014 and one in West Bridgford in
February 2016.
Thursday, 28 January 2016
Corbyn’s Campaign: The story of a remarkable summer.
Only a few months after the Labour Party’s
defeat in national elections in May 2015, the socialist, left-wing Jeremy
Corbyn was elected as the party’s new leader carried by a wave of enthusiasm in-
and outside the party. The book Corbyn’s
Campaign (Spokesman, 2016) provides interesting insights in crucial
aspects of this campaign and reflects on the possibilities for a socialist
renewal in Britain today. In this blog post, I will report on the book launch
with three of the authors, Tom Unterrainer, Adele Williams and Tony Simpson,
which took place at the Five Leaves
Bookshop in Nottingham on 27 January 2016.
Wednesday, 20 January 2016
Fighting for Public Water in Europe: The ECI Water is a Human Right.
Jan Willem Goudriaan, General Secretary
of the European Federation of Public Service
Unions (EPSU), has written regular updates (see 1,
2
and 3)
on where the European Citizens' Initiative (ECI) Right2Water fits in the broader
struggles of the European Water Movement and how it links with the struggle for
Another Europe. In this latest guest post, he gives an update following the European Parliament vote on the ECI report.
Saturday, 9 January 2016
Argentine elections 2015: a shift to the right and the need for a popular response.
The electoral victory of Mauricio Macri in the
recent Presidential elections in Argentina (22 November 2015) signifies a
dramatic change in Argentine and Latin American politics. Despite Mauricio
Macri's campaign promise to ‘keep the good policies’ of the former center-left
government, the reality of the first month in office is strikingly different. In
this guest post, Bruno Dobrusin
analyses these changes as well as the reasons for, and broader implications of,
the turn to the right in Argentina.