Economy

A Minimum Wage for Writers? ‘The Nation’ (Almost) Proposed It In 1912.

A Minimum Wage for Writers? ‘The Nation’ (Almost) Proposed It In 1912. A Minimum Wage for Writers? ‘The Nation’ (Almost) Proposed It In 1912.

There is no avoiding the inherently alienating consequences of trying to earn a living through the production of words.

May 30, 2014 / Back Issues / Richard Kreitner

How Local Governments Are Using Their Purchasing Power to End Sweatshop Labor

How Local Governments Are Using Their Purchasing Power to End Sweatshop Labor How Local Governments Are Using Their Purchasing Power to End Sweatshop Labor

With the government's leverage as both a consumer and a steward of the public trust, the public sector can hold the line against the fashion industry’s race to the bottom

May 30, 2014 / Blog / Michelle Chen

Renewable Energy Foes Poised to Return Ohio to ‘the Dark Ages’

Renewable Energy Foes Poised to Return Ohio to ‘the Dark Ages’ Renewable Energy Foes Poised to Return Ohio to ‘the Dark Ages’

A bill to block renewable energy standards is the product of an aggressive campaign by conservative groups to undermine laws that encourage the development of clean energy.

May 29, 2014 / Blog / Zoë Carpenter

Can New York City’s Welfare System Be Saved?

Can New York City’s Welfare System Be Saved? Can New York City’s Welfare System Be Saved?

By forcing people on welfare to trade personal dignity for social entitlements, the system seeks to shrink public spending at an unconscionable moral cost.

May 29, 2014 / Blog / Michelle Chen

How a Far-Right, Anti-Immigrant Party Became France’s ‘New Normal’

How a Far-Right, Anti-Immigrant Party Became France’s ‘New Normal’ How a Far-Right, Anti-Immigrant Party Became France’s ‘New Normal’

For the first time in recorded history, the ultra-right-wing National Front came first in a national election.

May 28, 2014 / Cécile Alduy

Let’s Stop Subsidizing Economic Inequality

Let’s Stop Subsidizing Economic Inequality Let’s Stop Subsidizing Economic Inequality

Why must you and I foot the bill, via our taxes, for the callousness of Wal-Mart or Domino's?

May 28, 2014 / Blog / Katrina vanden Heuvel

Class War: Thailand’s Military Coup

Class War: Thailand’s Military Coup Class War: Thailand’s Military Coup

Outnumbered by the country’s rural voters, Thailand’s once vibrantly democratic urban middle class has embraced an elitist, antidemocratic agenda.

May 27, 2014 / Foreign Policy In Focus / Walden Bello and Foreign Policy In Focus

Like Big Tobacco, Big Energy Targets the Developing World for Future Profits

Like Big Tobacco, Big Energy Targets the Developing World for Future Profits Like Big Tobacco, Big Energy Targets the Developing World for Future Profits

An increase in carbon sales to non-OECD countries will help create a humanitarian catastrophe of apocalyptic dimensions.

May 27, 2014 / Michael T. Klare

Activists Invade the Guggenheim: Holding US Institutions Accountable for Labor Abuses in Abu Dhabi

Activists Invade the Guggenheim: Holding US Institutions Accountable for Labor Abuses in Abu Dhabi Activists Invade the Guggenheim: Holding US Institutions Accountable for Labor Abuses in Abu Dhabi

The disruption at the Guggenheim was just a visual articulation of global, grassroots demands rising outside the museum walls.

May 26, 2014 / Blog / Michelle Chen

Piketty in Elysium

Piketty in Elysium Piketty in Elysium

If inequality sells in bookstores and box offices, it will sell at the polls as well.

May 23, 2014 / Foreign Policy In Focus / John Feffer and Foreign Policy In Focus

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