Actions in solidarity with those protesting in the United States against聽the murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police will be held across Australia this weekend. The protests will also be聽demanding an end to Black deaths in custody in Australia, reports Kerry Smith.
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Here's a look back at May's political news and the best new albums that related to it.
The scale and scope of government measures to deal with the COVID-19 crisis have shattered long-held neoliberal dogmas, writes Dave Holmes.
Many people around the world have heard of Cuba's inspiring and unmatched international medical solidarity efforts in the COVID-19 pandemic, writes Peter Boyle.聽But how is Cuba faring in the struggle against the pandemic at home?
The recent destruction of a major cultural heritage site,聽Juukan Gorge in Western Australia, was undertaken in the name of Rio Tinto shareholders' profit, writes聽Samuel Knight.
You鈥檝e probably heard The Ballad of 1891 about the Queensland shearers鈥 strike. You can probably sing Kev Carmody鈥檚 From Little Things Big Things Grow about the Gurindji Walk Off at Wave Hill in 1961. But do you know the story of the Jobs for Women campaign at the Wollongong steelworks in the 1980s? Check it out at the Sydney Film Festival, writes Karen Fletcher.
Canadian socialist and feminist Suzanne Weiss begins her recent memoir with these words by W B Yeats: 鈥淭here are no strangers here, only friends you have not yet met.鈥 More than just an epigram, they describe a practice of solidarity that saved Weiss from the Holocaust and later shaped her more than six decades of activity as a life-long socialist, writes James Clark.
The University of Sydney Women鈥檚 Collective is calling for residential colleges to be repurposed into safe, affordable student housing, reports Rachel Evans.
Susan Price argues that after 30 years of deregulation and cuts, the union's best defence is to launch a campaign of industrial action and protests involving students and the wider community.聽
The tabling of a bill to criminalise disrespect of the Chinese national anthem and looming national security laws ignited street protests in Hong Kong on May 24.
Scientists have projected that warming climate could cause combined heat and humidity to reach levels rarely, if ever, experienced before by humans. According to a new study, such conditions are already appearing, writes Kevin Krajick.
Rod Webb became an left-wing activist during a period of cultural and political upheaval and, as a film festival director and a network programmer, his commitment to his principles never faltered, writes Greg Adamson.
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