Richard Falk: Reflections on the Great Palestinian Prison Hunger Strikes of 2012
16 May 2012The end of the Palestinian hunger strike provides opportunity for reflection on its media coverage, legacy, and history.
With foreign companies amassing higher stakes and a greater presence in the Iraqi oil business, Greg Muttitt traces the rise of Production Sharing
Agreements (PSAs) and its effects on Iraqi sovereignty.
South Africa’s Pieter Hugo on negotiating representations of Africa, the searing controversy surrounding his work, Nick Cave, and his friend the late Tim Hetherington.
We didn’t have any bears and so drew straws / to dress up in the bear-suit and stand, vinyl-fanged // jaws agape in the hotel lobby.
I imagine what Janneke and Karin would say if they saw us together: Oh, she’s lost it now.
Sebastian Black and Cole Sayer discuss CGI, the NFL, and the mythology surrounding being a painter.
The end of the Palestinian hunger strike provides opportunity for reflection on its media coverage, legacy, and history.
There will be a winner in the 2012 election, but it won’t be Obama or Romney.
J.P. Morgan’s mounting losses and poor monitoring reveal the ongoing fragility of the U.S. banking system.
Honduran President Pepe Lobo received an International Leadership Award last week from the U.S. Congressional Hispanic Leadership Institute. But why?
On a recent trip to Israel, Randa Jarrar gets detained, denied entry, and sent to the “Arab Room.”
On staring death in the face and not noticing.
Health care reform may be repealed if Republicans win in November, but it may not be the only president’s signature legislation that’s in danger.
Six recent clashes and conflicts on a planet heading into energy overdrive.
Guernica seeks interns, a publishing intern, a fiction reader, and a grant writer.
Bartolomé de las Casas, a sixteenth century Spanish missionary, had a passion for social justice worth celebrating, and emulating.