Too Soon to Tell
Commentary
Hope and history are sisters: one looks forward and one looks back, and they make the world spacious enough to move through freely.
Commentary
Hope and history are sisters: one looks forward and one looks back, and they make the world spacious enough to move through freely.
Blog
A resolution to that end may be just sound and fury.
Column
The rise of Japan's reactionary right suggests that the country has yet to come to terms with its actions in World War II.
Commentary
Guatemala's genocide trial has lifted the curtain on the country's bloody past.
Video / Documentary
On April 17, thousands of people all over the world will occupy the military industrial complex as part of the Global Day of Action on Military Spending.
This is the second Global Day. Last year’s event, held on April 12, 2011, was a big success, with nearly 100 actions in 37 countries. In 2012, activists will organize many types of events, from protests at military bases to teach-ins. Each location will devise its own approach. But all the events will highlight the latest figure for global military spending, which will likely approach $1.7 trillion.
GDAMS is coordinated by the Institute for Policy Studies (Washington DC) and the International Peace Bureau (Geneva).
Go to demilitarize.org for more information.
V. Noah Gimbel, "Occupy the Military Industrial Complex" (Washington, DC: Foreign Policy In Focus, March 28, 2012).