May 1, 2014
Fred Magdoff is professor emeritus of plant and soil science at the University of Vermont and a long-time commentator on political-economic topics. John Bellamy Foster is editor of Monthly Review… READ MORE
May 1, 2014
Hans A. Baer teaches in the Development Studies Program at the University of Melbourne but previously had taught in various other universities in the United States, Australia, and at Humboldt… READ MORE
May 1, 2014
Michael Joseph Roberto (mjroberto48 [at] gmail.com) is associate professor of history at North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University in Greensboro. He is a longtime activist in local politics and… READ MORE
April 1, 2014
The insidious nature of the economy, state, and cultural apparatus of global monopoly-finance capital is difficult to perceive—if only because it is to be found everywhere we look. Focusing on… READ MORE
March 1, 2014
This issue of Monthly Review is mainly devoted to two commemorations: for Paul Alexander Baran, who died fifty years ago this month; and for Hugo Rafael Chávez Friás, who died… READ MORE
March 1, 2014
Nicholas Baran is the son of Paul A. Baran. He is an attorney and former computer technology journalist and writer. His article “Privatization of Telecommunications” appeared in the July–August 1996… READ MORE
February 1, 2014
A comparison of the present state of the natural sciences with that of the social (or human) sciences cannot but give rise to a disquieting sense of the relative poverty… READ MORE
February 1, 2014
Robert W. McChesney is the Gutgsell Endowed Professor in the Department of Communication at the University of Illinois. He is the author of Digital Disconnect: How Capitalism Is Turning the… READ MORE
February 1, 2014
Steve Early was a national union representative and organizer for twenty-seven years. He is the author of three books about labor. This article is excerpted from his new book Save… READ MORE
February 1, 2014
C.U. Thresia was trained in anthropology, social medicine, and community health; her research interests span politics and history of public health, and women’s health. She is currently pursuing research on… READ MORE