Friday, 16 December 2022
COP 27 – Surviving the Apocalypse: From ‘me’ to ‘we’.
Monday, 12 December 2022
COP 27 – Greening Everything: Putting back more than we take out.
Thursday, 8 December 2022
Watch out Benjamin Zephaniah! International Relations Theory poetry.
Tuesday, 6 December 2022
COP 27 – ‘The 15-minute city’: connectivity as driver of carbon reduction.
Tuesday, 29 November 2022
COP 27 – Energy: Back to the Future, local democracy, public ownership and social inclusion.
Tuesday, 22 November 2022
COP 27 – Feeding the Future
Monday, 21 November 2022
Neoliberal strikes for the neoliberal university!
Thursday, 17 November 2022
COP 27 – Avoiding the Apocalypse
Friday, 30 September 2022
Rise UP, Notts! Organizing for Social Justice
Friday, 26 August 2022
Analyzing, Strategizing and Taking action: The European Summer University of Social Movements in Mönchengladbach.
Saturday, 13 August 2022
Why public ownership is key: private water and the problems of sewage pollution and leaks.
Britain’s private water companies are yet again in the news. After reports on high and regular discharge of raw sewage into the country’s rivers (The Guardian, 31 March 2022), it is their high levels of water leakage, which make the headlines in the current drought. While 14 billion litres are the daily demand in England and Wales, another 3 billion litres are lost due to leaks (BBC, 12 August 2022). In this blog post, I will argue that the type of ownership is fundamental when thinking about how to tackle these problems.
Sunday, 31 July 2022
Labour Conflicts in the Global South!
Monday, 4 July 2022
Public Water Services in times of emergency: the case of the Covid19 outbreak.
Monday, 27 June 2022
Fighting for Water: Resisting Privatization in Europe – first reviews
Since the publication, several reviews have been published, all available on the internet. This blog post brings them together.
Sunday, 12 June 2022
Put Out More Flags! The Platinum Jubilee and the long arm of history.
70
years on the throne are truly remarkable. Unsurprisingly, people up and down
the country poured into the streets to celebrate the anniversary of Queen
Elizabeth II over four days from 2 to 5 June. Houses were decorated with Union Jacks and red-white-blue bunting,
thousands of street parties organised across the country. While many of my
left-wing British friends fled in horror either abroad or to some hidden place
in the countryside to escape it all, I happily stayed back and joined in. After
all, what can possibly be wrong with neighbourhoods coming together and celebrating
jointly? This was not the moment to engage in critical discussions about
unelected Heads of State or the virtues of Republics, I thought. It should not
take long, however, before the darker undersides revealed themselves.
Thursday, 28 April 2022
The Critique of Commodification: Moving towards a use-value society?
Friday, 11 March 2022
The Limits to Commercial Capitalism
Friday, 4 March 2022
Capitalist expansion, the war in Ukraine and three decades of missed opportunities in Europe
There had been huge hopes for a peaceful, prosperous future in a united Europe after the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. Three decades later, the war in Ukraine has brought these hopes to an end. In this post, I will argue that the seeds for the current crisis were sown right at the beginning of the post – Cold War period in the 1990s, when capitalist social relations of production were imposed on Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) backed up by NATO military power.
Sunday, 27 February 2022
Workers solidarity in the EU multilevel system: When and where can it occur?
Trade unions have the task to organise collectively and establish relations of solidarity amongst working people. And yet, they have often found it difficult to extend this solidarity across borders within the European Union (EU). In this blog post, I will argue that while the capitalist dynamics of Uneven and Combined Development (U&CD) make transnational solidarity often difficult, it is not impossible either. Especially if we expand our understanding of labour movements beyond trade unions and also include social movements such as environmental groups in our definition, then labour movements have on a number of occasions demonstrated their ability to defend the interest of society against capitalist exploitation. Most notably, I will refer to the European Citizens’ Initiative (ECI) ‘Water and Sanitation are a Human Right’ as well as the resistance against the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP).