Against Freeports
Freeports are not the solution to Scotland’s industrial decline. Maggie Chapman considers the challenges they present for the left.
Freeports are not the solution to Scotland’s industrial decline. Maggie Chapman considers the challenges they present for the left.
Drawing on years of experience working at Prestwick freeport, Peter Henderson sees dangerous signs in the latest blueprints and sets out nine questions which demand urgent answers.
Freeports are more than a greenwashing gimmick, writes Ryan Morrison. They mark a grim concession to corporate efforts to profit from the climate crisis.
New poetry by James Barrowman takes inspiration from his namesake's terminological excavations.
Mary Brooksbank is inspiring a new generation of socialists far beyond her Dundee home, finds Siobhan Tolland.
The commemoration of John Maclean a century after his death reveals much about the current culture of the Scottish left, writes Henry Bell.
Alex Baird organised the industrial action that brought the workers of Wallacetown Engineering victory over General Electric in 1982. He tells Cailean Gallagher how the battle was won.
Control of the Gaza-Egypt crossing at Rafah has been shifting for decades. The border’s complex history should inform debates about Egypt’s actions and intentions today, writes Jane Glen.
With its legal credibility torn to shreds, the time has come to re-evaluate the Scottish Government's adoption of the IHRA definition of antisemitism, suggests Phil Chetwynd.
With government money pouring into local climate change adaptation, Elliot Hurst considers how the left might shape a better flood response.