Category: Uncategorized

  • We Need to Recognise Jo Cox’s Murder as an Act of Far-Right Terrorism

    We Need to Recognise Jo Cox’s Murder as an Act of Far-Right Terrorism

    Published on 22. June 2016 by James Bartholomeusz and Paul Stocker In the early afternoon of Thursday 16 June, British MP Jo Cox was murdered. On the way to a local library for a meeting with her constituents, she was confronted by an armed man shouting “Britain first”. The man, Thomas Mair, proceeded to shoot…

  • Brexit and the Change from Within

    Brexit and the Change from Within

    On 23 June the citizens of the United Kingdom will have to decide if they want to remain part of the European Union or rather, after the deal that British Prime Minister Cameron negotiated a few months ago, if they want to remain part of the European Union under a special status. This deal implies…

  • Brexit or Bremain, the British Culture War Is Just Getting Going

    Brexit or Bremain, the British Culture War Is Just Getting Going

    Yes, thank God – it’s nearly over. In a fortnight’s time, the British public will finally decide at the ballot box whether or not to remain part of the European Union, bringing to a close several months of agonisingly irrelevant campaigning. There were those of us who hoped this referendum campaign would stimulate something of…

  • TTIP and CETA – Myths Debunked

    TTIP and CETA – Myths Debunked

    90,000 protesters in Hanover (Germany) expressed their displeasure and discomfort with the secret negotiations about TTIP and CETA, when Obama visited the city in April. 250,000 had preceded them last October in Berlin. Meanwhile more than 3.45 million people have signed the online petition Stop TTIP – I am one of them. On Monday, 2…

  • An Immigrant Experience – or Something Like It

    An Immigrant Experience – or Something Like It

    This is going to a bit of a different, more personal piece from me. A few months ago, for a variety of reasons, I decided that I would spend the summer in Berlin. I’ve now been here for two weeks, and turning up in a foreign country – not for a short trip but with…

  • In Defence of Social Rights in Greece

    In Defence of Social Rights in Greece

    Last weekend the Greek Parliament discussed and finally passed a bill on the new national insurance system. The bill which had been proposed by the government introduces further reductions of the higher pensions, a gradual elimination of the pensioners’ social solidarity allowance and the establishment of a national pension that amounts to 384€ per month.…

  • Thoughts on Campaigning in Scotland: Door Knocking as a Tool in the Fight Against Right-Wing Attitudes

    Thoughts on Campaigning in Scotland: Door Knocking as a Tool in the Fight Against Right-Wing Attitudes

    I have just returned home from 6 hours of leafleting.  A few days ago I did four hours of canvassing for the Scottish Green Party for the upcoming Scottish elections. Last week I knocked on doors for four or five hours to promote and discuss a tenants organisation I am helping to form, Living Rent,…

  • A Very Ugly Opposition: Anti-Semites Versus Islamophobes in British Politics

    A Very Ugly Opposition: Anti-Semites Versus Islamophobes in British Politics

    We all know that democratic politics is about building coalitions of different interest groups, bringing people together to hammer out a common position that serves the majority. The inverse of this tendency, equally if not more important, is carefully managing where the inevitable divisions caused by such coalitions fall. European history is replete with cases…

  • The Birth of ‘Nuit Debout’: a French Spring Awakening

    The Birth of ‘Nuit Debout’: a French Spring Awakening

    One night, after a demonstration against the ill-fated ‘El Khomri bill’, named after the French Minister of Labour and intended to reform the French labour market, groups of people decided to stay together on the highly symbolic Place de la République in Paris, in order to think, talk, debate and propose alternatives to current French…

  • The Question of Free Speech Is Back on the Agenda

    The Question of Free Speech Is Back on the Agenda

    For our Swedish friends Blå Ögon (Blue Eyes) is probably old news, but the TV drama has just reached the UK’s Channel Four as the latest serving of ‘Scandi noir’ for British viewers. Set in a slightly reimagined version of present-day Sweden, the series follows an election campaign closely fought between the ruling Labour Party…