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Books on Breaking Police Power
Radical alternatives to Police and Prisons.
Radical alternatives to Police and Prisons.
Sita Balani examines the regulation of white women’s sexuality in the British colonies.
"It is mostly through intimate relationships that we reproduce ourselves emotionally, and that we create our sense of authentic subjectivity. But these relationships are often in themselves a source of pain and frustration." - Alva Gotby
"The home is often not a space of refuge." — Alva Gotby
What would it mean to theorise love as a form of labour? How can we think of our emotional dependency on other people in political terms, rather than as expressions of individual and interior subjectivity?
"There comes a time when every old student must decide whether or not to renew their driver’s license" — Mike Davis
How do we maintain hope in the face of despair and collective political burnout?
Katherine Angel on the endless negotiations of power within sexual experiences.
Erik Olin Wright examines the complex tension between class interest and achieving class objectives.
Jean-Paul Sartre sets out the grounds for the verdict that the United States government committed genocide in Vietnam (1967).
“If capitalism survives by creating monsters that it cannot itself fully control, then those monsters must also have the capacity to harm capitalism itself. Like Frankenstein’s monster, they might destroy their own master.”