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Mie Inouye

To make change, movements need to build endurance—the capacity to keep people showing up despite their differences.

Juliet Hooker
Charisse Burden-Stelly
Liz Theoharis
Nathan R. DuFord
Daniel Martinez HoSang
Astra Taylor & Leah Hunt-Hendrix
Jodi Dean
Sarah Schulman
William J. Barber II
Alex Gourevitch
Mie Inouye
David Roediger
Azadeh Shahshahani

The United States has long supported the repression of Latin American land defenders. The tactics it exported are coming to the Atlanta forest.

Mariame Kaba & Kelly Hayes

Movement building requires a culture of listening—not mastery of the right language.

David Scott

It's at the heart of what makes The Black Jacobins a classic.

Clark Randall

How a little-understood feature of urban finance—municipal bonds—fuels racial inequality.

Salim Vally, Enver Motala

The late South African intellectual and activist—imprisoned on Robben Island alongside Nelson Mandela—fought for a world without race and class. His writings remain essential.

Ben Schacht
From the Magna Carta to the Mexican Revolution, there’s more to them than meets the eye.
Margaret A. Burnham, Jeanne Theoharis

Jeanne Theoharis speaks with Margaret Burnham on her work in reconstructing Jim Crow terror, within and outside the law.

Joel Whitney

Fifty years ago, the American Indian Movement occupied the site of a historic massacre. They won real gains in the face of brutal counterinsurgency tactics.

Boston Review
Can education fix inequality?
Ben Schacht
The United States routinely contradicts its founding ideals.
nia t. evans

A conversation with Dan Berger and veteran activists Zoharah Simmons and Michael Simmons on the origins of Black Power and the work of coalition building.

N'Kosi Oates, J.T. Roane

N'Kosi Oates speaks with J.T. Roane about Philadelphia's spatial politics and resistance to racial containment.

Joshua Abramson Cohen

Daniel Boyarin makes the seemingly paradoxical proposal that in order to end Zionism, Jewishness should be defined as nationhood.

Robin D. G. Kelley

Thelonious Monk lost (and found) in Paris.

Gaiutra Bahadur

On violence and the possibility of solidarities in America.

Will Holub-Moorman

Family policing is deeply unjust. The nuclear family is too.

Kenda Mutongi

What does it mean for those living in the diaspora to remain attached to the land they left behind?

Ira Katznelson

Revisiting When Affirmative Action Was White, nearly two decades on.

Boston Review
Among them are Kimberlé Crenshaw, Angela Davis, bell hooks, and Robin D. G. Kelley. You can read them here.
Boston Review
A reading list in honor of the radical philosopher’s birthday.
Christopher Newfield

Institutional reform is no match for pervasive structural inequality.

Nathalie Etoke, Lewis Gordon

In the Black existentialist tradition, freedom lies in the constant struggle for liberation.

Panashe Chigumadzi, Cornel West

When Desmond Tutu reconciled African theology and Black theology.

Robin D. G. Kelley

In her scholarship, mentoring, and activism, Farah Jasmine Griffin brings a praxis of radical love to an unequal academy.

David Waldstreicher

Historian Gerald Horne has developed a grand theory of U.S. history as a series of devastating backlashes to progress—right down to the present day.

Robin D. G. Kelly, Deborah Chasman

Robin D. G. Kelley on the midterm elections.

Boston Review
If the Supreme Court deems it unconstitutional, how else might we challenge entrenched inequalities?
Mike King

A posthumous collection tracks Noel Ignatiev’s commitment to class struggle, abolishing whiteness, and finding a vision of freedom in the minds and actions of working people.

Tobias Hübinette

The recent electoral success of a party with Nazi origins must be understood as part of the long history of white Swedes’ desire for racial homogeneity.

Joshua Gutterman Tranen

Harm reduction strategies, like those pioneered by queer men of color, have the best chance of stopping this disease.

Jennifer C. Nash

Freedom means a world where how I parent is simply mundane rather than overburdened with meaning. 

Nate File
 
Joseph Margulies

Draconian individual punishment distracts from systemic change and reinforces the cruelest and most racist system of incarceration on the planet.

Jonna Perrillo

In her new book, historian Kelly Lytle Hernández makes the case for why U.S. history only makes sense when told as a binational story.

Robin D. G. Kelley

Robin D. G. Kelley published his pathbreaking history of the Black radical imagination in 2002. Where are we two decades later?

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Most Read

Andrew J. Douglas, Jared Loggins
Farah Jasmine Griffin

Popular Authors

Lawyer, writer, organizer, and author of Becoming Abolitionists: Police, Protests, and the Pursuit of Freedom.
Professor of American History at UCLA

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Now’s the time to get our latest issue!

Until September 29, sign up for a print membership and get a copy of On Solidarity, plus four forthcoming issues—that’s 5 issues for the price of 4 (and 50% off the cover price)!

Use code FREECOPY at checkout.