• Monthly Review
  • Monthly Review Press
  • MR (Castilian)
  • Climate & Capitalism
  • Money on the Left
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Mastadon
MR Online
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact/Submission
  • Browse
    • Recent Articles Archive
    • by Subject
      • Ecology
      • Education
      • Imperialism
      • Inequality
      • Labor
      • Literature
      • Marxism
      • Movements
      • Philosophy
      • Political Economy
    • by Region
      • Africa
      • Americas
      • Asia
      • Australasia
      • Europe
      • Global
      • Middle East
    • by Category
      • Art
      • Commentary
      • Interview
      • Letter
      • News
      • Newswire
  • Monthly Review Essays
  • | Bangladeshi garment workers block a road demanding their unpaid wages during a protest in Dhaka Bangladesh April 16 2020 Credit AP PhotoAl emrun Garjon | MR Online

    The COVID-19 catastrophe in Bangladesh

    Originally published: The Diplomat on April 29, 2020 by Sudha Ramachandran (more by The Diplomat)  | (Posted May 07, 2020)

    The virus risks plunging Bangladesh into social, economic, and political turmoil—not to mention the public health crisis.

  • | Le Thi Mit at her home in Cam Nghia in Quang Tri Province | MR Online

    Victims left behind in U.S. Agent Orange cleanup efforts

    Originally published: The Diplomat on September 26, 2019 by Sonya Schoenberger (more by The Diplomat)  | (Posted Oct 04, 2019)

    Vietnamese victims have yet to receive compensation–and many live in desperate poverty.

Monthly Review Essays

  • Ruy Mauro Marini’s Contribution to the Political Economy of Imperialism
    Torkil Lauesen | | MR Online

    In “The Dialectics of Dependency,” Ruy Mauro Marini developed a theory of dependency and unequal exchange that is still invaluable today.

Lost & Found

  • Militarism and the Coming Wars
    István Mészáros | What Did You Learn from Iraq | MR Online

    The dangers and immense suffering caused by all attempts at solving deep-seated social problems by militaristic interventions, on any scale, are obvious enough. If, however, we look more closely at the historical trend of militaristic adventures, it becomes frighteningly clear that they show an ever greater intensification and an ever-increasing scale, from local confrontations to […]

Trending

Popular (last 30 days)

RSS MR Press News

  • RSVP: The Korean Policy Institute on Izzy Stone’s classic, MRP’s first ever book May 22, 2023
  • Cold War 2.0: The Military-Industrial Complex Survives (Washington’s New Cold War reviewed by ‘The Populist’) May 22, 2023
  • “The truth was inconsequential” (The Hidden History of the Korean War in ‘Counterpunch’) May 20, 2023
  • Beyond “vague notions of environmental stewardship”(Capitalism in the Anthropocene reviewed in ‘Counterfire’) May 18, 2023
  • A dialectic of continuity and discontinuity (Capitalism in the Anthropocene reviewed in ‘Journal of Interdisciplinary History of Ideas’) May 18, 2023

RSS Climate & Capitalism

  • The ‘net zero’ hoax: Chevron’s fraudulent climate plan exposed May 24, 2023
  • Ecological ruin or ecological revolution? May 22, 2023
  • Global heat will hit new records in next five years May 17, 2023
  • Has the ocean heat bomb been ignited? May 13, 2023
  • Capital’s long war to dispossess the poor May 11, 2023

 

RSS Monthly Review

  • May 2023 (Volume 75, Number 1) May 1, 2023 The Editors
  • Grand Theft Capital: The Increasing Exploitation and Robbery of the U.S. Working Class May 1, 2023 Fred Magdoff
  • Lula’s Return and the Legacy of Destruction May 1, 2023 Rosa Maria Marques
  • The Telecom Industry in India: Free Market or Monopoly-Finance Capital? May 1, 2023 Rahul Varman
  • Introduction to the New Edition of ‘The Hidden History of the Korean War’ May 1, 2023 Tim Beal

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Creative Commons License

Monthly Review Foundation
134 W 29TH ST STE 706
New York NY 10001-5304

Tel: 212-691-2555