December 1, 2020
Asbjørn Wahl is a trade union advisor, writer, and activist. Until recently, he served as president of the Urban Transport Committee of the International Transport Workers’ Federation (ITF) and leader… READ MORE
December 1, 2020
Thomas E. Lambert is an applied economist with the College of Business at the University of Louisville, where he has mostly taught economics and business statistics. His work has appeared… READ MORE
December 1, 2020
Leontina Hormel is a professor in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at the University of Idaho. � Kari Marie Norgaard, Salmon and Acorns Feed Our People: Colonialism, Nature, and… READ MORE
December 1, 2020
Paul Buhle is the author and editor of several Monthly Review Press books. He began contributing to the magazine in 1970. His latest book is Ballad of an American: A… READ MORE
November 1, 2020
In this issue of Monthly Review, we are publishing two articles marking the two-hundredth anniversary of the birth of Frederick Engels: John Bellamy Foster’s “Engels’s Dialectics of Nature in the… READ MORE
November 1, 2020
The author would like to thank Fred Magdoff for his help at several points in this article. In “The Part Played by Labour in the Transition from Ape to Man”… READ MORE
November 1, 2020
Kaan Kangal is an associate professor of philosophy at Nanjing University, specializing in dialectics, hermeneutics, metaphysics, and Marx-Engels research. His work on Marx’s Bonn Notebooks won the 2019 David Riazanov… READ MORE
November 1, 2020
Meredeth Turshen is professor emerita at the E. J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, Rutgers University. She can be contacted at turshen [at] rutgers.edu. Annie Thébaud-Mony is emerita… READ MORE
November 1, 2020
Joshua Sperber is an assistant professor of political science and history at Averett University. He is the author of Consumer Management in the Internet Age: How Customers Became Managers in… READ MORE
November 1, 2020
Ian Angus edits the website Climate and Capitalism. He is the author of numerous books and articles, including A Redder Shade of Green (Monthly Review Press, 2017). This article is… READ MORE