Latest

Comics
The Banality of Barbarism
Matt Bors

Forty Years in Solitary: Two of the Angola Three Sue Louisiana Prison Officials
George Lavender

Labor
Rank-and-File Rail Workers Rebel Against Single-Person Crews
Kari Lydersen

Feature
Shareholders Say, ‘Show Me The Money’
A new rule could require companies to disclose information long requested by their shareholders.
David Sirota

Feature
Janay Rice and the Problem with Trauma Voyeurism
Women's bodies, and the pain inflicted on them, are still regarded as public property.
Jude Ellison Sady Doyle

Labor
In Pennsylvania, Labor Poised to Unseat Corbett in November Elections
Bruce Vail

Feature
The James Foley I Knew
A great journalist, a better friend.
Jeremy Gantz
Video
John Oliver Explains Why Student Debt Will Ruin Our Lives
Miles Kampf-Lassin

Labor
Student Labor Activists Renew Spirit of 1964 Freedom Summer
Bruce Vail

Comics
Cheney’s Regrets?
Eric Garcia

Feature
Whither the American Dream?
In the wake of the foreclosure crisis, the Federal Housing Finance Agency has moved to make homeownership harder for ordinary Americans.
Mitria Wilson

Feature
The People’s Climate March: This Generation’s March on Washington?
The climate justice movement is preparing for what could be its biggest mobilization yet. The stakes couldn't be higher.
Nick Engelfried

Comics
Mansplaining the Celebrity Nude Photo Hack
Matt Bors

Dispatch
New Hampshire Rebellion
Activists march for campaign-finance reform in the Granite State.
Theo Anderson

Feature
The Tamale Underground
Street vendors must skirt the law to make a living.
Rebecca Burns

Labor
Railroad Conductor: ‘Railroading Has Changed So Much’
Steve Early

Viewpoint
Trojan Hobby Horse
Courts don't just treat corporations as people--they treat them as sweethearts.
Chris Lehmann

Labor
Protesters Arrested at $15-an-Hour Action Outside Burger King
Rose Arrieta
Announcing In These Times’ New Agreement with the National Writers Union
Freelance contributors are essential to the quality and success of In These Times and independent media, and this agreement is one way to demonstrate their value to our publication and our commitment to transparency.
For more information about the National Writers Union, visit nwu.org.
Read the full agreement, which reaffirms a floor for the rates of our freelance editorial content, as well as our current rates (which are higher) and submissions guidelines below.