Articles

  • Aug 8, 2024 | progressivehub.net | Tadhg Larabee |Eva Rosenfeld

    Georgia’s sweeping and political application of conspiracy law echoes a tactic that shattered the left roughly a hundred years ago, when the U.S. government targeted socialist parties and militant unions with laws against criminal syndicalism, espionage, and sedition. By Tadhg Larabee and Eva Rosenfeld, DissentJust after sunrise on November 13, 2023, hundreds of protesters gathered in Gresham Park on Atlanta’s outskirts. As they zipped up painted jumpsuits, a police helicopter circled overhead.

  • Jul 8, 2024 | jacobin.com | Eva Rosenfeld

    Abraham Cahan arrived by steamship from Vilna to Philadelphia in June 1882. From there he was shipped by train and ferry to Castle Garden, an immigration depot in Manhattan’s Battery Park. He would later become the editor of the Yiddish journal the Forward and a towering figure of New York socialism. But on his arrival, […]

  • Jun 6, 2024 | portside.org | Tadhg Larabee |Eva Rosenfeld

    The Criminalization of Solidarity: The Stop Cop City Prosecutions Published June 6, 2024 Just after sunrise on November 13, 2023, hundreds of protesters gathered in Gresham Park on Atlanta’s outskirts. As they zipped up painted jumpsuits, a police helicopter circled overhead. It was the start of the latest action in a sprawling, decentralized campaign to stop construction of the Atlanta Public Safety Training Center, better known as Cop City.

  • May 22, 2024 | dissentmagazine.org | Tadhg Larabee |Eva Rosenfeld |Amna Akbar |Daniel Boguslaw

    The Criminalization of Solidarity: The Stop Cop City Prosecutions Georgia’s sweeping and political application of conspiracy law echoes a tactic that shattered the left roughly a hundred years ago, when the U.S. government targeted socialist parties and militant unions with laws against criminal syndicalism, espionage, and sedition. and ▪ Spring 2024 Just after sunrise on November 13, 2023, hundreds of protesters gathered in Gresham Park on Atlanta’s outskirts.

  • Apr 17, 2023 | beltmag.com | Eva Rosenfeld

    By Eva Rosenfeld “Why do nurses strike?”A nurse and state union leader named Nadine Furlong delivered a speech with this title at a 1984 ethics conference sponsored by the University of Michigan. Furlong was exasperated with the question, or at least the underlying accusation, which seemed actually to be “Why do nurses strike when the right to strike conflicts with the duty to care?” Such an inquiry was laced with “erroneous assumptions,” she said.

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