Decca Muldowney talks to labour lawyer Franck Magennis about the restrictions on the right to strike in Britain today.
Today, the far right is once again trying to gain a foothold in Wales, this time finding a very different reception. Nigel ...
Edd Mustill re-examines the 1926 strike through an international lens.
One hundred years on, how are the events of May 1926 still relevant? This special edition of New Internationalist seeks to ...
Kim Kelly examines the Minneapolis shutdown that forced back ICE operations, asking what it means to call it a general strike ...
Argentinian president Javier Milei has launched a wholesale attack on workers. Josefina Salomón and Patricio A Cabezas report ...
Lydia Godden is a freelance journalist and community energy professional. Originally from the South Wales Valleys, her work focuses on energy justice, the development of post-neoliberal economies and ...
Danny Dorling begins his series of articles by presenting the evidence that greater equality benefits everyone, rich and poor – and argues that it can offer us all political hope.
Agricultural air pollution seems to be a tough nut to crack. Amy Hall explores the air-pollution problem down on the farm.
An oil boom is reshaping Guyana’s future. Ben Jacob traces the country’s long history of colonial exploitation from Britain’s sugar factory to Exxon’s oil fields. Georgetown, the capital city of ...
Beyond the sensationalist headlines, Obiora Ikoku finds a deeply rooted crisis, made worse by the country’s ruling elite. Nine months ago, Rita Gendaga was preparing for her late father’s funeral when ...
Secretive and ruthless, the traffickers controlling the kidney trade thrive on the desperation of the poor and the sick. Nancy Scheper-Hughes lays bare the ‘collateral damage’. The slide on the screen ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results