To stop global heating, tax multinationals better
The rapid, radical decarbonisation needed to save the planet will cost a lot. Taxing multinationals and the wealthy properly can help pay for it.
The rapid, radical decarbonisation needed to save the planet will cost a lot. Taxing multinationals and the wealthy properly can help pay for it.
The pandemic has barely increased global income inequality—but it has made other inequalities worse.
From interwar Vienna through 1980s London and beyond, municipalities are the crucible of compelling socialist initiatives.
Jayati Ghosh is baffled that at a coming food summit the UN should partner with the World Economic Forum, not its own specialist agencies.
Nobody really knows what prospects await Afghan refugees when countries have yet to see human rights as rights for all humans.
The leaders of the Spanish government and that in Catalonia have met across the table—but the gap between them remains large.
Democratic erosion in Hungary is symptomatic of structural problems afflicting most democracies, even threatening the future of civilisation.
Ultimately, resolving the collective-action dilemma of preserving a liveable planet will require a UN ‘constitution of the Earth’.
Weronika Grzebalska argues that Lukashenka’s thrashing around in eastern Europe forces progressives to offer a positive alternative on security.
Adding a ‘social partners option’ to the minimum-wage directive could unblock negotiations while protecting well-functioning collective bargaining systems.
Recent headlines make it seem an inauspicious moment for a progressive transatlantic political alliance—yet this couldn’t be more urgent.
Norway’s electorate has an existential choice to face about its Oil Fund, associated with domestic prosperity but looming climate catastrophe.
Supporting a conversion to wood burning has unwittingly incentivised power plants to increase greenhouse gases.
The cause of the precariat isn’t helped by fuzzy thinking about who and what it is.
Sheri Berman argues that post-communist left embrace of economic as well as political liberalism allowed populists to target the latter.
Left governments adopted more conservative fiscal policies than right governments in recent crises. They have dire electoral consequences.
The Turkish president no doubt thinks his decision to de-ratify the Istanbul convention is irreversible. The main opposition party disagrees.