Jeremy Brecher responds Jeremy Brecher responds to Murray Bookchin's critical response of Brecher's review of Bookchin's book. Phew!
Listen Marxist: a reply - Murray Bookchin Murray Bookchin replies to Jeremy Brecher's review of Post-Scarcity Anarchism.
A post-affluence critique - Jeremy Brecher Post-Scarcity Anarchism by Murray Bookchin (Ramparts Press, 1971) reviewed by Jeremy Brecher Root & Branch No. 4 (1973), pp. 7-22.
A very great year? - Eve Smith Eve Smith discusses the aims and effectiveness of Nixon's economic policies on the working class in the America.
Italy: women in the Fiat factory The following article was written by a Turin collective working on the problems of women employed by Fiat. It was published in Lotta Continua,…
Keep on truckin' - Mac Brockway (Tim Costello) Mac Brockway (pseudonym for Tim Costello) analyses the machinations of unions in maintaining order in the workplace, with particular focus on a small dispute in the truck driving industry in New York.
Point of view: Solidarity Root and Branch introduce the British libertarian socialist group Solidarity to their American readers, appending the group's statement of principles, As We See It, below.
Old left, new left, what's left? - Paul Mattick, Jr. Paul Mattick Jr. takes a look at the 'New Left' and student movement at the end of the 1960s.
Manifesto - Ecology Action East Root and Branch put forward a communist approach to environmental issues.
Notes on the postal strike - Stanley Aronowitz and Jeremy Brecher Root and Branch on the wildcat strike of US postal workers in 1970 and its implications.
The revolt at Radomir - Tico Jossifort The story of a little-known Bulgarian anti-war movement; including a 1918 mass mutiny and armed rebellion. This led to fraternisation with…