china
Understanding China’s role in American empire reminds us how urgently we must confront the capitalist world system in its entirety.
A Marxist student attempts to organize young migrant workers at a Guangdong factory in the year of the Foxconn suicides.
An abolitionist organizer in the US argues that connecting across borders—making power rather than taking power—is key to cultivating collective liberation.
Smith’s book outlines an ecosocialism driven by mass movement-building democratically self-organized by the working-class, which is precisely the kind of politics from below that the CCP has been keen to curtail.
Grassroots media play a crucial role in documenting the advent of capitalism in China and the increasing mobilizations against government power by the working class.
Taiwan and Hong Kong are often thought of as projections of each others' past or future. How can we move beyond this binary framing to open a path for broader transnational political exchange?
In China, the emergence of mutual aid groups in response to the pandemic brings new possibilities, amidst a narrowing space for public participation.
In the latest nationalist flare up, President Trump imposed new visa restrictions on STEM graduate students and scholars from China.
Hong Kong’s rising current of localism is rooted in anti-Chinese and anti-immigrant beliefs. But we must reject such bigoted ideas and remember that Hong Kong’s ongoing movement comes from the same canon of radical resistance as the 1989 Tiananmen Massacre.
The US’s restriction of visas for Chinese journalists is a blow to press freedom yet its fallout has been largely overlooked in the mainstream media.