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Wednesday, Feb 22nd 2012


New Look Left Out Now!

The new edition of Look Left is available in all good bookshops now -well, those willing to stock it - including an article by me, no less. An important edition to read I think, as Ireland’s corporate neo-liberal foot soldiers frog march us towards economic oblivion. Friend them on Facebook.

The editorial of the new edition of LookLeft calls on working people north and south to build a progressive alliance to challenge the policies that are wrecking our economy and society.

“There are always choices. Currently throughout Ireland the failed elite would like you to believe there are none. Whether it is Stormont parties forcing through Tory cuts that will throw the economy back into recession or southern parties who are only too willing to serve their new IMF masters, they say it is their way or the highway.

As elections come and go it is clear that the choices for the working class are however limited. There is currently no united working class movement capable of remoulding the economy and society to benefit the many rather than the few.

Now is the time for the building of such working class and progressive solidarity. It is becoming clear to all that the policies of economic growth must replace the cutback agenda which aims merely to move the costs of corruption from the culprits to society as a whole.”

The full editorial is available at this link: New LookLeft out now! : Look Left

The new edition is available at the following outlets, and some of the articles are listed below.

On sale in Easons stores across Northern Ireland, Dublin (O’Connell Street), Cork (Patrick’s Street), Limerick and Galway. Other outlets stocking LookLeft include Books Upstairs and Connolly Books (Dublin 2) and Solidarity Books (Cork)

Articles include:

  • Free Education for Everyone: The student fightback
  • the End of Fianna Fáil?: Brian Hanley
  • The Zapatistas 17 years of Rebellion: Andrew Flood
  • Northern Ireland needs an opposition: Justin O’Hagan
  • Interview with TEEU leader Eamon Devoy
  • The IMF: capitalism’s boot-boy: Ultan Gillen
  • Building a progressive alliance: Michael Taft
  • What we do now: Donagh Brennan
  • The Art of History - review of graphic novels - Kevin Squires
  • Book review: Fergus Whelan’s Dissent into Treason
  • Documentary review: The Pipe

Discussion

We welcome and encourage lively discussion from the public about articles on Irish Left Review. You can leave a comment using the form at the bottom of the page. Please read through the existing comments before posting your own.

  1. Comment by: PSavage

    Feb 19th 2011 at 11:02

    Fantastic cover. Good to see such a wide group of people contributing - anyone know how long this has been going?

  2. Comment by: Conor

    Feb 20th 2011 at 10:02

    Got a copy, really enjoyed reading it. The workers party are probably doing more for uniting the various left ideologies than the ULA are!

    I would encourage anyone to pick up a copy, definitely more than just worth a read. And it could become a focal point for the broad left in the near future (if it already hasn’t done so).

  3. Comment by: LeftAtTheCross

    Feb 21st 2011 at 14:02

    @PSavage, the current run is just a year old at this stage, with 4 issues before this current one.

    Two of the previous issues are available on-line at

    http://issuu.com/lookleft/docs/look_left_summer_2010

    http://issuu.com/lookleft/docs/finished

  4. Comment by: Jeniffer Celotella

    Feb 21st 2011 at 15:02

    Picked it up over the weekend, really enjoyed the layout and design.

  5. Comment by: LeftAtTheCross

    Feb 21st 2011 at 21:02

    Just found that all 4 previous issues are available at:

    http://www.politico.ie/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=7072&Itemid=1129

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Sins of the Father

Sins of the Father:

Tracing the Decisions

That Shaped the Irish Economy,

by Conor McCabe

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