The Existential Problem of Urban Studies  

When I became director of the undergraduate Urban Studies Program at the University of Pennsylvania in 1983, I was surprised to find that it lacked a multidisciplinary course that aimed to provide a coherent interpretation of contemporary urban America. What …



Two States or One (Arab) State  

Danny Rubinstein’s account, in his Summer 2010 Dissent article (“One State/Two States: Rethinking Israel and Palestine”), of the disdainful reaction of Sufyan Abu-Zayda, a prominent figure in the Palestinian Authority, to Benjamin Netanyahu’s “Bar-Ilan speech,” in which the right-wing prime …



Which Socialism?  

In the not-so-distant past, when Norberto Bobbio, the Italian political theorist, first asked this question, it was (or so it looks today) relatively easy to answer. There were only two choices: the version of socialism that prevailed in what we …







The Long Con  

Theatre by David Mamet Faber and Faber, 2010, 157 pp., $22 Here is a fact beyond dispute: David Mamet is the most visible and widely respected American playwright of the last quarter-century. His acid-tongued dramas of the 1980s, which zeroed …





Jesse Larner Responds  

Michael Lieberman insists that hate crime laws do not criminalize speech or thought. Let’s examine this position first, as much flows from it. As Lieberman points out (and as I noted in my article), U.S. hate crime laws indeed require …



Socialism and the Current Crisis  

Today, because of the crisis, the relevance of socialism can and must be addressed not simply as a desirable long-term goal but as a question of practical policy, focused on securing jobs, benefits, and social provision. After giving some examples …



Prisoner of Privilege  

A Great Unrecorded History: A New Life of E.M. Forster by Wendy Moffat Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2010, 386pp., $30 Concerning E.M. Forster by Frank Kermode Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2009, 170pp., $24 In 1953, when the first issue of …





What Would a Real Socialist President Do?  

In the still unfolding national debate about the economy, everything opposed by the extreme Right and the Republican Congressional caucus (the two can hardly be separated) is labeled as socialism. Repeal the Bush tax cuts? Obama wants to redistribute wealth. …



Introduction  

“The Socialist movement is as wide as the world,” Eugene V. Debs told the large crowds that came to hear him all over the United States, “… its mission is to win the world, the whole world, from animalism, and …





Achieving a More Integrated America  

Despite the black family in the White House, this seems an odd moment to think about the possibilities for minority mobility and ethno-racial integration. Recent Census Bureau data demonstrate what we could have guessed from past economic downturns: African Americans …