PAUL DONOVAN is chilled by the contemporary resonance of Harper Lee’s coming of age tale amidst racism and white supremacy in this excellent production
This selection of writings and speeches by Tony Benn, skimming the surface of his archives, reveals his eloquent yet plain-speaking style. It’s devoid of personal attacks on his opponents — Benn was only concerned with the issues.
Benn was a “run-of-the-mill Labour MP,” not a radical socialist, when he entered Parliament in 1950. Nevertheless, he resigned from his first government post because he would not support the first-use of nuclear weapons by Britain.
He became postmaster general and then minister of technology in Harold Wilson’s government but moved steadily to the left in the 1960s. He was strongly influenced by the Upper Clyde Shipbuilders sit-in, which he saw as a lesson in industrial democracy as well as an assertion of the right to work.
Four decades on, the Wapping dispute stands as both a heroic act of resistance and a decisive moment in the long campaign to break trade union power. Lord JOHN HENDY KC looks back on the events of 1986
BRENT CUTLER welcomes a valuable contribution to discussions around the need to de-carbonise energy production
MAT COWARD tells the story of the eccentric founder of a short-lived but striking experiment in ‘vital democracy,’ who became best known for giving away his estate to the nation
SALEEM BADAT and VASU REDDY introduce a new book about an outstanding interpreter of the world, and an activist scholar committed to changing society


