Between 1996 and 1998, the Mirarr people in the Northern Territory fought plans for a uranium mine on their land in Kakadu. It included an eight-month blockade of the mine site. Tami Gadir argues that the mine was eventually stopped due to strong grassroots campaign made up of traditional Mirarr owners, Aboriginal activists and tens of thousands of people in Australia, including environmentalists, unionists and students.
Abortion and women’s liberation in the US
Early educators speak out
Is revolution possible in the West?
Neither Washington nor Moscow
Refugees: will anything change under Labor?
Labor and the Great Depression
Hiroshima: why did the US drop the bomb?
Wage theft: a not-so-hidden scandal
I was there: the Black Moratorium
I was there: fighting apartheid in South Africa
Roe v Wade: the fight for abortion rights
No to AUKUS and nuclear submarines
Sexual politics and socialism
What would socialism look like?
Revolution and the Middle East: why Palestine is still the issue
I was there: Brunswick Against the Nazis
The Communist Manifesto
Does privilege explain racism?
On the offensive: union activists speak
Morrison out: but what’s the alternative?
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