Is Affirmative Action Fair?: The Myth of Equity in College Admissions
Involuntary Consent: The Illusion of Choice in Japan’s Adult Video Industry
Voices from Death Row, Second Edition
Cannibal Capitalism How Our System Is Devouring Democracy, Care, and the Planet—and What We Can Do About It
Human Rights and Social Justice: Key Issues and Vulnerable Populations
Making the Public Service Millennial: Generational Diversity in Public Service
Poverty as Subsistence: The World Bank and Pro-Poor Land Reform in Eurasia
The American Surveillance State How the U.S. Spies on Dissent
Hope Under Neoliberal Austerity: Responses from Civil Society and Civic Universities
Encounters With Theory as Conceptual Medium and Creative Practice
Encounters with Theory as Conceptual Medium and Creative Practice explores the relationships and intersections between verbal and visual ways of researching, challenging the privilege of the written word in academe. Rooted in a grant-funded artistic research course, the data and experiences shared here illuminate the transformative power of visual thinking and visual literacy as a research data, analysis as well as artifact.
An Orgy of Thieves
Neoliberalism, that catch-phrase of our time, is one of those squishy words that resists a simple definition, but everyone feels its meaning as they struggle to pay the rent, put off going to the doctor, gasp for breath in rotten air or see their sons and daughters shipped off to fight distant wars for oil or lithium. Neoliberalism is nothing less than capitalism’s latest and perhaps cruelest manifestation. It arrived stealthily in America under the seemingly benign grin of Jimmy Carter, kicked into gear under Reagan, and reached maximum speed during the Clinton era, when the legacy of FDR was dismantled and its government pastures were sown with deregulationist salt so it would never take root again. Cockburn and St. Clair were there to cover this economic warfare from the frontlines—from NAFTA to the gutting of welfare, the drug war to the Wall Street bailouts. These dispatches from the wreckage document how a generation of political do-gooders cut the cords of the social safety net, letting millions fall into destitution “for their own good,” as the wealthiest among us fattened their bank accounts in a frenzy of accumulation, an orgy of thieves.