How does the project of
European integration relate to globalization? Is a revival of the project of
social Europe still possible and what role can social movements and class based
movements play in these struggles? I met Cat Moir (CM) from the University of
Sydney on the fringe of this year’s Historical Materialism Sydney conference in
December 2018. In this post, I re-publish the interview she conducted with me
during that meeting. It was originally published on the Progress
in Political Economy blog on 10 January 2019. We talked about class, social
reproduction, and the crisis in the European project, thereby also drawing on my recently published, co-authored book with Adam D. Morton Global Capitalism, Global War, Global Crisis (CUP, 2018).
Tuesday, 29 January 2019
Tuesday, 22 January 2019
A social dimension to ‘free trade’? TUC Strategies and the GATT Social Clause, 1973–1994.
The
rise of ‘new generation’ trade agreements such as TTIP and CETA, the ongoing
debates surrounding Brexit, and the Trump administration’s aggressive
protectionism have seen the issue of trade move away from being merely the
preserve of pro-liberalisation lawyers and economists towards a much more
public debate on the social costs of free trade policies. Alongside this
debate, trade unions and civil society organisations have taken to the streets
to oppose free trade agreements in record numbers. Trade is most certainly now
a mainstream issue. Nonetheless, such opposition has still failed to curb the
overwhelmingly neoliberal tendencies of world trade in general. In this guest
post, Andrew Waterman discusses
efforts to include a social dimension in trade agreements.
Tuesday, 15 January 2019
100 years on – Rosa Luxemburg’s legacy continues!
Memorial to Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht |
Tuesday, 8 January 2019
'We are ready to defend ourselves!' Letter by indigenous nations to the new President of Brazil.
The election of Jair Bolsonaro as new President of Brazil has
put indigenous people under renewed pressure. Only recently, loggers invaded
indigenous territory and attacked indigenous people in the Xingu region in Para.
This blog post reprints the letter of three indigenous nations from Brazil to President Bolsonaro, asserting their rights.
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