Preventing the next virus outbreak
The coronavirus is not a natural disaster but the outcome of a system of agriculture subordinating animal, and human, welfare.
The coronavirus is not a natural disaster but the outcome of a system of agriculture subordinating animal, and human, welfare.
For 40 years, US Republicans have been insisting that ‘government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem’. The bankruptcy of this has been laid bare.
The challenges of social and environmental injustice are as intense as ever. But which social forces can act as the agents of change?
Enterprises must address—and government more actively demand of them—their observance of human rights.
Branko Milanovic writes that the coronavirus is reminding some of the world’s privileged what it is like to experience its daily stigmas.
Women’s strikes today draw attention to the need for global tax reform, so that investment in services can ease the burden of women’s domestic labour.
Migrant workers are by nature more diverse than the indigenous workers among whom they find themselves. Organising strategies need to be diverse too.
The US Republican Party has made an accommodation to Donald Trump its leaders may come to regret.
Educational research models children as autonomous actors. Education policy, notably in Germany, still however aims to guide innate capacities into adulthood.
There has been little honest reflection within the European Commission about the eurozone crisis. Until now.
As a critical resource that is unlike anything that came before it, big data demands a robust policy response.
In talking about their future relationship with the UK, EU leaders may want to mind their language.
The EU should bring a new climate agenda to Glasgow—including a roadmap for emerging nations to embrace a future beyond fossil fuels.
The sociologist David Williams has said racism makes us sick and this is also true at work. How can we create workplaces which promote wellbeing for all?
Paul Mason explains how, even after the UK has technically left the EU, ‘Brexit’ has escalated into a culture war over immigration.
The opening of debate on minimum wages across the EU has precipitated a Nordic union reaction against incursions on collective bargaining.
Societies should not allow firms' owners and their agents to drive the discussion about reforming corporate governance.