Journalist and author Eyal Press’ book Dirty Work: Essential Jobs and the Hidden Toll of Inequality in America examines the morally troubling jobs that are done in our name, and shines a light on the workers who do them. Press argues that these workers are hidden by the powerful in society who want to keep the violence of prisons, slaughterhouses, and battlefields out of the public eye.
How the Prison-Industrial Complex Undermines Immigrant Rights
For This Art Curator, the Aesthetic is Political
Community First! Tiny Homes, Big Intentions
Stanford Professors Take On Silicon Valley
Broadway’s Break: A Deep Breath For The Industry?
Tackling Erasures with a 'Radical Archive'
Invisible by Default: What You Won't See on GoFundMe
The Women Forgotten in the Wars We Started
'Missing and Maligned' No More, Muslims Push For Better Roles
Let’s Talk About Sex, Sexism and Health Equity
The Wealth Defense Industry - or How Billionaires Hide Their Assets
Power and Consent: Reconsidering Oral History
The Culinary Artist Putting Liberation on the Menu
Food Rescue Hero: Salvaging Food Waste to End Hunger
'We Have Names': Meet the Women Fighting for Climate Justice
Found in Translation Seeks Language Justice
Curator Says It’s Time to Tackle Art World’s Racist Culture
If Colonialism Is the Disease, Are Reparations the Cure?
Giving Circles: A Gift to Philanthropy
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