INTERNATIONAL SOCIALIST REVIEW – ISSUE 68
International Socialist Review, Issue 68 is now out
ISSUE 68:
November-December 2009 TOO MANY PEOPLE?
Population, hunger, and the environment
EDITORIAL
The business of health care reform
ANALYSIS IN BRIEF
Elizabeth Schulte: Why won’t they call it racism?
Eric Ruder interviews Gareth Porter: Obama’s Afghan Disaster
COLUMN
Phil Gasper • Critical Thinking: What ever happened to “Change we can believe in?”
Shaun Joseph: The coup in Honduras: Perspectives and prospects
INTERVIEWS
Cleve Jones: Getting back to our roots
Walden Bello: The G20 after the crash
FEATURES
John Pilger: Power, illusion, and American’s last taboo
Chris Williams: Are there too many people?
Rick Kuhn: Economic crisis and the responsibility of socialists
HISTORY
Rebekah Ward: Darwin: the reluctant revolutionary
John Riddell: Clara Zetkin’s strugggle for the united front
Sharon Smith: 1934: The strikes that led the way
REVIEWS
Chrisopher Phelps: The sexual revolution, A review of Sherry Wolf’s Sexuality and Socialism
Ian Angus: Two accounts of Engels’ revolutionary life
Phil Aliff on soldier’s resistance; David Florey on racism after Katrina; Sara Knopp and Mais Jasser on a teenager’s diary under occupation; Marlene Martin on Mumia Abu-Jamal’s Jailhouse Lawyers; Chris Williams on Monthly Review’s special issue on food
Posted here by Glenn Rikowski
The Flow of Ideas: http://www.flowideas.co.uk