“Without understanding the devastation of the lives of working-class families in regions like West Virginia, and the vast increase in class inequality since the 2008 crisis, you can’t understand what’
How the class-struggle Teamsters leadership in the Upper Midwest organized to fight union busting, racism, and colonial oppression, as they opposed the mobilization of labor behind U.S. imperialist wa
Armando Choy, Gustavo Chui, and Moisés Sío Wong—three young rebels of Chinese-Cuban ancestry—threw themselves into the great proletarian battle that defined their generation. They became combatants in
Beginning in 1975 an epic battle was waged for the future of southern Africa. The Angolan people had just thrown off 500 years of Portuguese colonial brutality. Now South Africa’s white supremacist re
An unhesitating “Yes”—that’s the answer given here to the question, Is Socialist Revolution in the US Possible? Possible—but not inevitable. That future depends on us.This book is a contribution to th
Are They Rich Because They’re Smart? explains the sharpening class inequalities in the United States and the resulting conflicts accelerated by today’s slow-burning world depression. It takes apart th
“In the United States the judge will often give you the stiffest sentence allowed just because you went to trial, just for not pleading guilty. Everything we’re talking about here is the product of ca
The late Dobbs presents students, academics, researchers, and general interest readers with an examination of the history and social impact of Minneapolis Teamster Local 544 union in the nineteen-thir
This portrait of 16 years of struggle couldn't be more timely, with the release from US prisons of Gerardo Hernandez, Ramon Labanino, and Antonio Guerrero, joining Fernando Gonzalez and Rene Gonzalez
Seigle, Dobbs and Clark chronicle the Socialist Workers Party’s fifteen-year struggle which ultimately led to a victory in federal court (still standing) for the working class after a federal judge in
This book, first published in 1942, centers around testimony from the 1941 trial of leaders of the Socialist Workers Party and Upper Midwest labor movement. They had organized labor opposition to the