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- Marx Was Right –Marx predicted that capitalists will always try to push down wages and undercut working conditions. He was right, and the working class can push back if it builds power broadly and intersectionally.
- Everything Goes Up But Pay –Racialized women are at the forefront of labour’s most promising campaign.
- Regression Analysis –In Atlantic Canada, where a succession of corporate-compliant provincial governments have created an environment conducive to scabbing and receptive to the business lobby, workers are bargaining not with employers, but with fear, fragmentation, and poor prospects for a stable future of work.
- Accumulation by Dispossession –Corporations are after the resource-rich land – not sustainable, fair employment.
- Silenced –Revisiting a book published in 1989 shows us that racialized women’s domestic labour continues to be legislated exploitation.
- Can the NDP help millennials?
- Call for submissions (March/April)! –We’re looking for your analysis and art for the March/April 2017 issue!
- Order #5807 –Order #5807
- The Indigenous Nurses Who Decolonized Health Care –Few Indigenous labour history studies, especially in the post-fur trade era, focus on Indigenous women’s work, but labour functioned as a colonial tool to strip Indigenous people of title and status. Indigenous women faced the worst moral and social regulation, racism, and sexism at work, and so Indigenous women’s labour…
- Challenging the Mail Gaze –Are we paying enough attention to the postal workers’ fight for a robust and public postal service?
- Writing Across Borders –_Briarpatch_ editor Tanya Andrusieczko caught up with our sixth annual writing contest judges to talk history, habits, politics, and writing.
- November/December 2016 –Racialized women are at the forefront of the $15 and Fairness campaign. The natural resource sector views Indigenous peoples as surplus labour. Mexico’s teachers strike against neoliberal education reforms. Are we paying attention to the postal workers defending a public post office? Indigenous women’s nursing labour as a site of…
- Order #5802 –Order #5802
- Order #5801 –Order #5801
- Mitchell, Tracey –At 34.8, Tracey Mitchell’s age is also the median age in Saskatoon, the youngest city in Canada, where she currently lives. Tracey is the Prairie Region Manager for Next Up Leadership. Like many millennials, she also has a second job, working in peer support for mental health and addiction challenges.…
- Camfield, David –David Camfield is a supporter of socialism from below. His book Future on Fire: Capitalism and the Politics of Climate Change will be published in 2022. He hosts the podcast Victor’s Children and is a member of the editorial board of Midnight Sun. His website is prairiered.ca.
- McCallum, Mary Jane Logan –Mary Jane Logan McCallum is an associate professor in the history department at the University of Winnipeg. She studies and teaches modern Indigenous history and Indigenous–state relations in ways that reflect on the distinct nature of colonialism in Canadian history. Her current project examines Indigenous histories of tuberculosis, 1930–1970.
- Fuatai, Teuila –Teuila Fuatai is a freelance journalist based in Toronto and writes about social justice issues, workers’ rights, and developments in the labour movement. She is originally from New Zealand, and was the labour beat reporter for rabble.ca this year.
- Kesīqnaeh, Ena͞emaehkiw –Ena͞emaehkiw Kesīqnaeh is a member of the Menominee Nation of Wisconsin. He lives in the territory of the Anishinaabe and Rotinonshón:ni in southern Ontario, where he is a PhD candidate working in Indigenous critical theory and settler colonial studies.
- Karim, Alia –Alia Karim is a PhD candidate in the faculty of environmental studies at York University. Her research interests include Marxist political economy, Canadian labour unions, Indigenous–settler alliances, labour–community coalitions, ecosocialism, and urban agriculture.