
Delivery Drivers Deserve Better
Throughout the pandemic, we have relied heavily on delivery drivers. Now we need to stop their abuse at the hands of companies raking in massive profits.
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Billy Anania is an art critic, editor, and journalist in New York City.
Throughout the pandemic, we have relied heavily on delivery drivers. Now we need to stop their abuse at the hands of companies raking in massive profits.
If the horror of the last week has proved anything, it’s that the invasion of Afghanistan was a mistake – and those who think more military intervention can fix it are living in a fantasy.
The Taliban’s victory in Afghanistan is just the latest failure for liberal interventionism – and demonstrates once again that democracy can’t be built at the point of a missile.
Even before the Taliban takeover, 20 years of war in Afghanistan killed thousands and created millions of refugees – Britain has a responsibility to those it helped to displace.
A £186 million new venue, The Factory, is being touted as a hub for Manchester’s arts scene – but it’s also another example of ‘regeneration’ with little regard for local people.
A four-day week with no loss of pay would have an environmental impact equal to taking the UK’s entire private car fleet off the road – and make us happier and healthier, too.
This week, Spain’s ‘rider law’ came into force, requiring food delivery companies to recognise riders as workers – but big businesses are already finding ways to flout it in the interests of profit.
Years of cuts to Greek fire services have fuelled one of Europe’s worst natural disasters – and unless we invest in public services to fight climate change, it will become a familiar story.
With 445,000 tenants in arrears, it’s clear the landlord class is out of control. But rent controls can rein in their exploitation – and the movement backing the measure is growing.
Modernist painter, poet and sculptor Greta Knutson was for too long overshadowed by a famous husband – but today her work shows a thoughtfulness rare both then and now.
This week, Grace speaks to author and political scientist Thea Riofrancos about the IPCC report, the limits of green capitalism, and how the Left can chart a path to decarbonisation.
While the government ‘names and shames’ a few bosses who broke the law on pay, the minimum wage itself remains a scandal – denying millions of workers enough money to live.
Keir Starmer’s Future Candidates Programme promises to bring ‘normal’ people into politics – but in reality, it is designed to produce handpicked MPs with no sense of connection to the party membership.
The ‘Purge’ franchise and its offshoot ‘The Hunt’ try to feed the appetite for dark social satire about the modern USA – but end up as little more than weak fantasies of resistance.
Not all humans are equally culpable in the ‘human-induced’ climate chaos outlined in Monday’s IPCC report – and acknowledging that is key to stopping further destruction.
First Labour New Town, then epicentre of Thatcher’s ‘Essex man’, Basildon has long been a political weathervane. Now, in the wake of the pandemic, its residents need radical change.
On this day in 1792, French workers and revolutionaries stormed the Tuileries Palace – ending the monarchical system and declaring a republic.
The plan to ban legacy prosecutions arising from the Troubles in Northern Ireland isn’t an anomaly – it’s part of a broader effort to erase Britain’s crimes from the historical record.
The gagging clause in the Science Museum’s sponsorship contract with polluting giant Shell makes one thing clear – we can’t rely on corporate profiteers to fund the pursuit of knowledge.
The IHRA definition has increasingly been deployed to shut down debate about Israel and attack Palestine activists, but a new definition offers a more effective alternative in the fight against antisemitism.