Article Subjects and Geography: Movements
Ecological Civilization, Ecological Revolution: An Ecological Marxist Perspective
October 1, 2022
This is an adapted version of a lecture delivered to the John Cobb Ecological Academy in Claremont, California, on June 24, 2022, on the topic of ecological civilization. It was… READ MORE
Marx and Engels and Russia’s Peasant Communes
October 1, 2022
Ian Angus edits the web journal Climate & Capitalism. His books include A Redder Shade of Green (Monthly Review Press, 2017) and Facing the Anthropocene (Monthly Review Press, 2016) What… READ MORE
Monthly Review in Historical Perspective
October 1, 2022
Paul M. Sweezy was a founding editor of Monthly Review (along with Leo Huberman) and coedited the magazine from 1949 until 2004. This article was a talk given at Harry… READ MORE
Notes from the Editors, July-August 2022
July 1, 2022
buy this issue Monthly Review, which has its origin in the early Cold War years (the first issue of the magazine appeared in May 1949), focused to a considerable extent… READ MORE
Surviving Through Community Building in Catastrophic Times
July 1, 2022
Sit Tsui is an associate professor at the Rural Revitalization Strategy Research Institute, Southwest University, Chongqing, China. Lau Kin Chi is coordinator of the Programme on Cultures of Sustainability at… READ MORE
We Only Have One PlanetÑDefending It Will Require Collective Measures
July 1, 2022
João Pedro Stedile is a Brazilian economist, activist, and writer. He is a member of the national board of the Landless Workers’ Movement (MST), of which he is a cofounder…. READ MORE
Measures to Defend Life on Planet Earth and Improve Living Conditions
July 1, 2022
This document came out of the dissatisfaction of Brazilian popular movements with the 2021 UN Climate Change Conference in Glasgow. � The measures listed below are a result of collective… READ MORE
End Ecocidal Capitalism or Exterminate Life on Planet Earth: A South African Contribution to Ecosocialist Strategy
July 1, 2022
Vishwas Satgar is an associate professor of international relations, editor of the Democratic Marxism book series, and principal investigator of the Emancipatory Futures Studies in the Anthropocene project at Wits… READ MORE
Surviving Collapse Through Social Transformation and Regeneration
July 1, 2022
Christina Ergas is assistant professor of sociology at the University of Tennessee. They are the author of Surviving Collapse: Building Community Toward Radical Sustainability (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2021). Climate… READ MORE