The vocabulary of war contributes to concealing the differential impact of COVID, which has just found its first victims in the overcrowded refugee camps in Greece.
Authoritarianism, left unchecked to shape the public discourse, can self-propel and legitimise itself, diverting the blame for a degraded public health system from the state onto society.
Coronavirus must change the neoliberal rationale, and rescue the social contract between the welfare state and the market economy that can plan to prevent the crises to come.
In the face of the rapid advance of the Covid-19 pandemic around the world, it is worth asking who are among the most vulnerable populations today and why their potential extinction may accelerate ecocide in the short and medium term. Español
Indigenous cosmologies have always argued that we must treat the world as an interconnected, living organism with supreme complexity, fragile resilience and indeed mystique.
Ante el avance imparable de la pandemia del Covid-19 alrededor del mundo, vale preguntarse quiénes están hoy entre las poblaciones más vulnerables y por qué su potencial extinción puede acelerar el ecocidio en el corto y mediano plazo. English Português
Immigrant farm workers have long been essential to the United States. But they have never been recognized, respected or properly rewarded for their labour.