Marxism and Ecology: Common Fonts of a Great Transition
Socialist thought is re-emerging at the forefront of the movement for global ecological and social change.
Socialist thought is re-emerging at the forefront of the movement for global ecological and social change.
One should be grateful to one’s critics–it is much better to be criticized than ignored.
At its root, the Distributist movement sought a practical, community-oriented alternative to the inequality of capitalism and the bureaucracy of socialism.
It is easily forgotten that the inspiration for the wave of ‘city square’ movements that swept southern Europe and North America back in 2011 lay in the revolutions of the Middle East and North Africa
Over the nearly eight years that I’ve been posting these weekly essays on the shape of the deindustrial future, I’ve found that certain questions come up as reliably as daffodils in April or airport food on a rough flight.
Current events illustrate the potential unintended consequences of subordinating market-based cooperative organizing into economic planning…
Of course, traditional socialism was bound to fail.
•Let’s play fantasy economics. Things could really get better
•Re-imagining a world beyond capitalism and communism
•The End of Growth Wouldn’t Be the End of Capitalism
•Nationhood and the multitude: a new form of political subject?
•Nature and the economy: Marxism in an American labyrinth