Reparations – an idea whose time has come?
Does a racially just future need to include reparations for transatlantic slavery or is that a distraction from achieving equality for future generations? KA Dilday and Kehinde Andrews disagree on…
Spotlight: Ivey-Camille Manybeads Tso
Grace Livingstone talks to filmmaker Ivey-Camille Manybeads Tso about racism and the power of people coming togetherHow Roma are made stateless for generations
Jonathan Lee reports on the forgotten victims of Europe’s last refugee crisis.
The hostile environment in housing
Minnie Rahman on the legal fight against the British government’s racist ‘right to rent’ policy.
What Italy’s election results mean for migrants
The election results come as no surprise after a campaign marked by racist violence, argues Hsiao-Hung Pai.
Solidarity on Glasgow’s south side
Conrad Landin reports from a vigil in memory of Stanislav Tomas, a Roma man who died following a brutal arrest by police in the Czech Republic.
How to survive elite institutions like Cambridge as a woman of colour
Husna Rizvi speaks to the activist-authors of A FLY Girl’s Guide to Cambridge – a new book on women of colour navigating, and resisting, elite power.
Fighting hunger with solidarity
As employment dwindles and mass evictions loom, Keira Dignan and Frans Jansson speak to the grassroots food collective feeding Athens’ increasingly precarious population.
Spotlight: Anthony Joseph
Trinidadian musician Anthony Joseph tells Subi Shah about how important it is for his children to know about Windrush.
Lloyd’s of London’s debt
What would be the cost of reparations for the transatlantic slave trade and ongoing support of fossil fuels? Sahar Shah and Harpreet Kaur Paul explore the Lloyd’s insurance market.
So, what’s the alternative?
Community-based initiatives are helping keep people safe where the police fail. Lucilla Harrell and Amy Hall speak to organizers in Puerto Rico, Brazil and the US.
‘I cannot accept that there is no accountability’
Amy Hall speaks to Marcia Rigg of the United Families and Friends Campaign about the impact of deaths in state custody and how families in the UK have been fighting for justice.
Settlers displace West Bank Bedouins amid Israel’s Gaza attack
Under the cover of Israel’s attack on Gaza, armed settlers and soldiers are erasing entire Bedouin villages in the West Bank. Tom Anderson reports.
The interview: Sofia Karim
The outspoken artist and architect speaks to Subi Shah about art, architecture and activism.Don’t call the Essex 39 a ‘tragedy’
The British state is complicit in their deaths, argues Jun Pang.
Black women in the vanguard
In Brazil, misogynoir – misogyny directed at black women – has been used to fire up President Jair Bolsonaro’s machismo base, and divert the population’s attention away from his failings. Leonardo Sakomoto writes.
The radical book review
Jo Lateu, Peter Whittaker, and JP O’Malley on the latest releases in Left publishing.
Shoot first, ask questions later
In Rio de Janeiro, even bystanders are falling victim to brutal policing tactics, reports Leonardo Sakamoto.
Decolonization – the long goodbye
If you want to build a more just world, we need to confront the legacies of empire, argues Amy Hall.Mixed media: music
Louise Gray reviews the latest music releases by Songs of Our Native Daughters and Ibibio Sound Machine.
Why is Greece still ‘containing’ refugees in camps?
Isabelle Merminod and Tim Baster report from the Greek islands where thousands are ‘contained’ in crowded camps. Meanwhile on the mainland, refugees are rebuilding their lives.