Socialist Review – Contents by Issue (October 1993-September 1996) (original) (raw)
Contents by Issue
(October 1993 – September 1996)
(Under Construction)
No. 168, October 1993
Socialist Review
Editor:
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by:
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
JUDITH ORR
PAT STACK
LIZ RATTUE
MARGOT HILL
SIMON JOYCE
DUNCAN BLACKIE
JACK ROBERTSON
SABBY SAGALL
Business:
HAZEL CROFT
Reviews:
DUNCAN BLACKIE
HAZEL CROFT
NOTES OF THE MONTH:
- Labour Party: Mods and rockers
- Trade Unions: The angry silence
- Middle East: Through the eye of a needle
- Russia: Thieves fall out
- Poland: Thumbs down for market
- Greece: Paper promises
FEATURES:
The crisis of British politics, by Lindsey German
Rotten borough, by Chris Nineham
From barricades to ballots, by Kieran Allen
The workers’ weekly, by Chris Harman (interview)
The life and work of socialist historian E.P. Thompson
- The making of a working class historian, by Duncan Hallas
- An active process, by Alex Callinicos
Riding through the glen, by Judy Cox
REGULARS:
Briefing: Roads – Jam today and tomorrow
Letter from the US:
- Burying the bosses, by Sharon Smith
My favourite books, by Kit Hollerbach
REVIEWS:
Theatre:
- Hammer and thistle, by Lindsey German
- Play on words, by David Beecham
- Fatal attraction, by Hazel Croft
Films:
- Swamp Fever, by Shaun Doherty
- No causes left, by Lee Humber
- Style wars, by Liz Rattue
Books:
- Light in the darkness, by Lee Humber
- The human cost, by Roger Green
- Dead souls, by Lindsey German
- Red letters, by Chris Harman
- Worlds apart, by Judith Orr
- Dance of death, by Alex Callinicos
- Journey in time, by Clare Fermont
- Hunting our history, by Phil Webster
- Man in the middle, by Gareth Jenkins
LETTERS:
- Bigot’s corner, from Tom Delargy
- Superior brand of reformism, from Felipe Molina
- The art of revolution, from Jay Woolrich
TALKBACK:
- My brilliant career, by Stephanie Bridges
- Sign of the times, by Steve Emery
STACK ON THE BACK:
- The logic of compromise, by Pat Stack
No. 169, November 1993
Socialist Review
Editor:
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by:
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
JUDITH ORR
PAT STACK
LIZ RATTUE
MARGOT HILL
SIMON JOYCE
DUNCAN BLACKIE
JACK ROBERTSON
SABBY SAGALL
Business:
HAZEL CROFT
Reviews:
DUNCAN BLACKIE
HAZEL CROFT
NOTES OF THE MONTH:
- Tories: Portillo’s private practice
- Fascism: United we stand
- Letter from Haiti
- Ireland: Descent into hell?
FEATURES:
Top of the golden iceberg, by Lee Humber
- The real facts about the poor, by Hazel Croft
Planning the party, by Chris Bambery
Russia: A war on the population? by a Russian socialist
Strong arm of the law, by Jim Nichol (interview)
- Crime: behind closed doors, by Pat Stack
An empire built on blood, by Yunus Bakhsh
Rebels against the machine, by Suzanne Jeffrey
REGULARS:
Briefing: Immigration – Racism by numbers
Thinking it through:
- Unholy alliance, by Chris Harman
Letter from the US:
- Up to their necks, by Sharon Smith
My favourite books, by Red Saunders
REVIEWS:
Theatre:
- Identity crisis, by Simon Joyce
- Bloody pantomine, by Lee Humber
Film:
- Keep it in the family, by Gareth Jenkins
- Out on his own, by John Rose
Theatre/Film:
- One-sided stories, by Sabby Sagall
Books:
- Blind injustice, by Hazel Croft
- Back in the Dock, by Judith Orr
- A load of ballots, by Paul Symonds
- Revisionists revised, by Lee Humber
- Other side of the city, by Andrea Morrall
- Going to the devil, by Judy Cox
- Right royals, by Seth Harman
- Latin lessons, by Dave Beecham
- Another country, by Kevin Orr
- Death of a dream, by Pat Riordan
- International misery fund, by Jenny Witt
LETTERS:
- No Stalinist, from Raymond Challinor
- From Ransome to revolution, from Alan Crabtree
- Historical legacy, from Keith Flett
- A matter of choice, from Steve Hack
- Surreal experience, from Ian Birchall
TALKBACK:
- Against the streamline, by Joe Martin
- Bottom of the class, by Selina Todd
STACK ON THE BACK:
- Any means necessary, by Pat Stack
No. 170, December 1993
Socialist Review
Editor:
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by:
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
JUDITH ORR
PAT STACK
LIZ RATTUE
MARGOT HILL
SIMON JOYCE
DUNCAN BLACKIE
JACK ROBERTSON
SABBY SAGALL
Business:
HAZEL CROFT
Reviews:
DUNCAN BLACKIE
HAZEL CROFT
NOTES OF THE MONTH:
FEATURES:
Between recession and revolt, by Lee Humber &Gareth Jenkins
A battle undermined, by Mike Simons
The Frankenstein monster, by Chris Harman
Christmas Crackers, some SR Writers pick their favourite reads of 1993
Croatia: A small step for democracy, by Branko Horvat (interview)
All white with Labour, by Bob Carter
For land and liberty, by Mike Gonzalez
Paul Robeson: ‘I must keep fighting’, by Harold Wilson
REGULARS:
Briefing: Economic crisis – Miraculous failure
Letter from the US:
- The right turn to rape, by Sharon Smith
REVIEWS:
Theatre:
- A modern hell, 10 Marchby Gareth Jenkins
- One man and his dog, by Lee Humber
Film:
- In the right key, by David Turley
- Love hurts, by Sabby Sagall
Books:
- Hidden secrets of Victorian sexuality, by Lindsey German
- Follow my leader, by Brian McDonald
- Cops and robbers, by Judith Orr
- Shaky foundations, by John Newsinger
- Childhood memories, by Kevin Orr
- In black and white, by Seth Harman
- Born to rule, by Lee Humber
- Songs of sanity, by Ewa Barker
LETTERS:
- Right to march? from Adam J. Powell
- Don’t mention the war, from Ross Bradshaw
- No unity in the Union? by John McAnulty
- Selling out, from Leo Zeilig
- What do you know Joe? from Rob Wheatley
- Pat on Stack’s back, from Alan Crabtree
- Barely believable, from Val Bezzina
- Senseless censors? from Sarah Gregson
- Wrong focus, from Tom Delargy
TALKBACK:
- Treading on eggshells, by Simone Kane
- Sound of revolution, by Ray Brazier
STACK ON THE BACK:
- Pigs in clover, by Pat Stack
No. 171, January 1994
Socialist Review
Editor:
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by:
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
JUDITH ORR
PAT STACK
LIZ RATTUE
MARGOT HILL
SIMON JOYCE
DUNCAN BLACKIE
JACK ROBERTSON
SABBY SAGALL
Business:
HAZEL CROFT
Reviews:
DUNCAN BLACKIE
HAZEL CROFT
NOTES OF THE MONTH:
- Ireland: Too high a price?
- Russia: Gathering storm clouds
- India: No glittering prizes
- Eyewitness in Kurdistan, by Mark Campbell
FEATURES:
Family values: the big lie, by Jan Neilson
Italy: on the edge of a volcano, by Dave Beecham
Reform or revolution? by Hazel Croft
Frank Zappa: Spanner in the works, by Ben Watson (obituary)
The fight that blasted Heath, by Dave Sherry
From innocence to experience, by Lee Humber
REGULARS:
Briefing: Housing – Out in the cold
Thinking it through:
- The very idea of it, by Chris Harman
Letter from the US:
- Billion-dollar robbery, by Sharon Smith
My favourite books, by Audrey Farrell
REVIEWS:
Film:
- Song of betrayal, by Sabby Sagall
- Through the eyes of child, by Lee Humber
- Bad breeding, by Chris Nineham
Theatre:
- The business of war, by Gareth Jenkins
- Colonial style, by Weyman Bennett
Books:
- Science for socialists, by John Baxter
- The big chill, by Nick Howard
- Facing both ways, by Pat Stack
- Babylon’s burning, by Brian Richardson
- Monument to an age, by Alan Gibson
- Survival of the fittest, by John Newsinger
LETTERS:
- No path of peace, from Aleksandar Sasha Simic
- A matter of life or death, from Jake Hoban
- Across the divide, from Mark McIvor
TALKBACK:
- Part of the union? by John Charlton
STACK ON THE BACK:
- Credit where it’s due, by Pat Stack
No. 172, February 1994
Socialist Review
Editor:
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by:
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
JUDITH ORR
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
DUNCAN BLACKIE
SABBY SAGALL
CHRIS NINEHAM
KATE LORD
Business:
HAZEL CROFT
Reviews:
HAZEL CROFT
NOTES OF THE MONTH:
- Child Support Agency: Absent friends?
- Russia: Too big a shock
- NATO: More bangs per buck
- Nuclear power: Wasted energy
- Roads: Dead end street, by Kate Lord
FEATURES:
The sleaze factor, by Lindsey German
When protest rises, by Daniel Ricca
Kurdistan: Balanced on a knife edge, by a Socialist from Turkey
History distorted, by Arthur Scargill
A shaft of light, by Heather Croft
Upsetting the stall, by Chris Harman
Blackshirts across the border, by Henry Maitles
A touch of class, by John Rose
Middlemarch: Novel times, by Gareth Jenkins
REGULARS:
Briefing: NHS – Critical condition
Thinking it through:
- The beast is back, by Chris Harman
Letter from the US:
- The two-year plan, by Sharon Smith
My favourite books, by Jim Allen
REVIEWS:
Film:
- Father’s day, by Cathy Bergin
- Man in the middle, by Martin Smith
- Growing pains, by Lawrence Wong
- Indian takeaway, by Hazel Croft
- Roundup
Theatre:
- Shadow from the past, by Gareth Jenkins
- Last call, by Chris Chilvers
Television:
- A special breed, by Chris Nineham
Music
- The paths of glory, by Frank Ormston
Photography
Books:
- A monstrous aberration, by Chris Bambery
- Running a temperature, by Duncan Hallas
- The acceptable Bolshevik, by Derek Howl
- A common enemy, by Julie Waterson
- More than skin deep, by Yuri Prassad
LETTERS:
- Out of the ghetto, from John Saville
- Breaking new ground, from Keith Flett
- A monstrous tale, from Manfred McDowell
- How big a menace? from Wayne Hall
- Fringe benefits, from Philip Wilson
- Cause for concern, from Janet Evans
TALKBACK:
- They couldn’t care less, by Ann Fannin
STACK ON THE BACK
- ‘I cannot tell a lie ...’, by Pat Stack
No. 173, March 1994
Socialist Review
Editor:
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by:
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
PAT STACK
SABBY SAGALL
JUDITH ORR
BECCY REESE
PETER MORGAN
JOHN PARRINGTON
NICOLAI GENTCHEV
WEYMAN BENNETT
Business & Reviews:
PETER MORGAN
BECCY REESE
NOTES OF THE MONTH:
- Workers’ movement: Our green shoots
- Students: Hot potato
- Crime: Howard’s way
- Algeria: Poor and angry
- Strikes: The pain in Spain, by a Spanish Socialist
FEATURES:
Racism: an issue for us all, by Avtar Jouhl (interview)
Horror at the end of the tunnel, by Claire Dissington
- ‘It can happen again’, by Esther Brunstein
When women fought back, by Judith Orr
- Will women always be oppressed? by Lindsey German
- My single hope, by Jaide Barreiros (interview)
- Natural selection? by Kate Lord
‘It is right to rebel’, by Charlie Hore
Fight to the finish, by Duncan Blackie
Obituary: Derek Jarman, by Kevin Ovenden
REGULARS:
Briefing: Tax – Legalised robbery
Thinking it through:
- Bomb warning, by Chris Harman
Letter from the US:
- First sign of spring? by Sharon Smith
My favourite books, by Michael Bogdanov
REVIEWS:
Art
- Visual poetry, by Chris Nineham
Film:
- Innocent parties, by Alex Callinicos
- Out of court, by Seth Harman
Theatre
- Down to earth, by Clare Fermont
Music
- Driving out demons, by Rob Broughton (interview)
Books
- Small people have a right to justice, by Josh Clarke
- Born in war and blood, by Chris Bambery
- From coast to coast, by Martin Smith
- Minimum programme, by Brian McDonald
- Backwards or forwards? by Dave Treece
- Ancestral homes, by John Parrington
- Spanish Harlem, by Kelly MacDermott
- Poetry and stuff, by Maureen Levin
LETTERS:
- Home truths, from Paul Symonds
- Why no march? from Phoebe Watkins
- Middle of the road, from John Parrington
TALKBACK:
- They try to tell us we’re too young, by Regan Kilpin
STACK ON THE BACK:
- Oranges and fruitcakes, by Pat Stack
No. 174, April 1994
Socialist Review
Editor:
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by:
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
DUNCAN BLACKIE
SABBY SAGALL
CHRIS NINEHAM
KATE LORD
PATRICK CONNELL
Business:
HAZEL CROFT
JUDITH ORR
Reviews:
HAZEL CROFT
NOTES OF THE MONTH:
FEATURES:
On the critical list, by Gareth Jenkins
Past caring, by Hazel Croft
South Africa: power to the people? by Alex Callinicos
- Prison to parliament, by Charlie Kimber
- Continental drift, by Basker Vashee
1934: rebellion from below, by Chris Bambery
- Friends at the top, by Lindsey German
- The cry of unity, by Chanie Rosenberg
Kings of the road? by Sabby Sagall & Dave Beecham
The winds of cold war, by Dave Crouch
REGULARS:
Thinking it through:
- Miracle workers, by Chris Harman
Briefing: Children’s rights – Spare the rod
Letter from the US:
- Double standards, by Sharon Smith
My favourite books, by Alan Plater
REVIEWS:
Film
- Passing strangers, by Sabby Sagall
- Lost generation, by Charlie Hore
- Crossroads in history, by Pat Collins
Theatre
- The modern merchant, by David Thacker (interview)
- Not the MCC, by Mark Steel
Art
Books
- God’s chosen people, by Lindsey German
- Nato’s new frontier, by Chris Harman
- Close up on hell, by Duncan Blackie
- Many lost worlds, by Mike Gonzalez
- No saviour from on high, by Gareth Jenkins
- The wrong dividing line, by Susan Geoghegan
LETTERS:
- A magic age? from Richard Purdie
- Plain barmy, from Nicolai Gentchev
- Out of obscurity, from Mark Brown
- Crossing the border, from Laurie McDowell
- German heavy weights, from A German Socialist
- Labour plots, from Joanne Earley
- In defence of science, from Bill Spence
TALKBACK:
- Cathy clear off, by Audrey Farrell
- White male European, by Barry McLaughlin
STACK ON THE BACK:
- No more heroes, by Pat Stack
No. 175, May 1994
Socialist Review
Editor:
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by:
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
DUNCAN BLACKIE
SABBY SAGALL
CHRIS NINEHAM
KATE LORD
PATRICK CONNELLAN
Business:
HAZEL CROFT
JUDITH ORR
Reviews:
HAZEL CROFT
NOTES OF THE MONTH:
- Elections: Vote of no confidence
- South Africa: Freedom now – and tomorrow?
- Bosnia: Powers of partition
FEATURES:
Silencing the Nazi threat, by Paul Foot
Broadcast blues, by Chris Lineham
Italy’s past weighs on the present, by Dave Beecham
Worth fighting for, by Eamonn McCann
A tale of two movements, by Phil Marshall
Ignorance is bliss, by Andrea Butcher
- Little England, by Suzanne Jeffrey
REGULARS:
Thinking it through
- Half a critique of political economy, by Chris Harman
Briefing: Prisons – The longest sentence
Letter from the US:
- The war on the poor, by Sharon Smith
My favourite books, by Penny Kay
REVIEWS:
Film
- Reaping the harvest, by Anna Gluckstein
- The workers’ friend, by Gareth Jenkins
- Better late than never, by John Beckley
Video
- Free thinker, by Clare Farmont
Brazil Festival
- Songs of slavery, by Dave Treece
- Poems of protest, by Richard Chappell
Music
- Spokesman for generation X: Kurt Cobain, by Ian Bosworth & Ashlea Harris (obituary)
Books
- Voice of the depression, by Clare Fermont
- Dream and reality, by Pat Stack
- Black Pride, by Mike Hobart
- Close up on revolution, by John Newsinger
- No going back, by Goretti Horgan
- Global warning, by Mike Gonzalez
- Tale of two tyrants, by Kevin Orr
- The diplomatic dance, by Margot Hill
LETTERS:
- Revolutionary treatment, from Brin Price
- To rebel is to be ill, from Paul Baker
- Freedom to choose, from Daran McFarland
- Enemy agents? from Dileep Bagnall
- Sex, laws and consent, from Derek Howl
- Blanket ban, from James Drummond
- Closet bigots, from Tom Delargy
TALKBACK:
- One law for them, by Andy Russell
STACK ON THE BACK:
- Bolshie bishops, by Pat Stack
No. 176, June 1994
Socialist Review
Editor:
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by:
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
DUNCAN BLACKIE
SABBY SAGALL
CHRIS NINEHAM
KATE LORD
PATRICK CONNELLAN
Business:
HAZEL CROFT
JUDITH ORR
Reviews:
HAZEL CROFT
NOTES OF THE MONTH
- Labour leadership: Modern times
- Labour left: Don’t rock the boat
- Ship without a keel, by Paul Foot
- Italy: Balancing act
FEATURES
Build the resistance, by Chris Bambery
The fight for revolution, by Duncan Hallas
South Africa: the struggle goes on, by Terry Bell
- Striking gold
- Countdown to compromise, by Charlie Kimber
- Mandela’s new cabinet
Students: A sense of the possible, by Judith Orr
The people’s war, by Chris Lyneham
Come together or stay apart? by Kevin Ovenden
- Smart business, by Jane Lewis
All in the mind, by John Parrington
REGULARS
Briefing: Censorship – Not on front of the children
Thinking it through
- Flexible friends? by Chris Harman
Letter from the US
- Cops and Klan, hand in hand, by Sharon Smith
My favourite books, by Austin Burnett
REVIEWS
Film
- Nothing is what it seems, by Chris Chilvers
Theatre
- Sign of life, by Sarah Finigan
- Middle class crisis, by Lee Humber
Opera
- Songs from the terraces, by Frank Ormston
- Operatic justice, by Sabby Sagall
Photography
Obituary
- Ralph Miliband, by Colin Barker
Books
- ‘Days are like hours’, by Hazel Croft
- View from on high, by Mike Haynes
- Deep differences, by Gareth Jenkins
- Rum, sodomy and the lash, by Duncan Hallas
- Dying or surviving, by Clare Fermont
- On another planet, by John Newsinger
- Map reading the mind, by Sue Caldwell
- Happy families? by Kate Lord
LETTERS
- Helter skelter, from Gianfranco Sinha
- Child abuse: it’s not the norm, from Julia Nawrocha
- Better than nothing, from Stephen Arthur
- The same old story, from Andy Russell
TALKBACK
- Mega brilliant, by Ray Brazier
- The will of conquerors, by George Coombs
STACK ON THE BACK
- Out of character, by Pat Stack
No. 177, July/August 1994
Socialist Review
Editor:
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by:
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
PAT STACK
SABBY SAGALL
JUDITH ORR
BECCY REESE
PETER MORGAN
JOHN PARRINGTON
NICOLAI GENTCHEV
WEYMAN BENNETT
Business & Reviews:
PETER MORGAN
BECCY REESE
NOTES OF THE MONTH
FEATURES
Last hope for Labour? by Judith Orr
‘The Zapatistas have opened our eyes’, by Augusta Dwyer (interviews)
Brief encounters, by Mike Haynes
Beautiful dreamer, by Gareth Jenkins (obituary)
A matter of life and death, by Michael Ross
- Dear Michael – 1, from Peter Linebaugh
- Dear Michael – 2, from John Rees
Bursting the chains, by Sabby Sagall
Empire strikes back, by Rob Hoveman
REGULARS
Briefing: Arms – Death race
Thinking it through
- The anxious class, by Chris Harman
Letter from the US
- Sabre rattling, by Sharon Smith
REVIEWS
Film
- Profane illuminations, by Alex Callinicos
- A fairy tale of courage, by Anne Cooper
- Tales from the city, by Bryan Smith
Theatre
- Crushed hopes, by John Tate
- Another moral panic, by Pat Connellan
- Cut throat capitalism, by Lee Humber
- Broken promise, by Rob Morgan
Music
- It’s not all union jacks, by Dave Beecham
Books
- Unlocking the prison house, by Chris Harman
- Path of revolution, by Sharon Geoghegan
- Rapping good yarn, by Brian Richardson
- Do’s and dont’s, by Sam Ashman
- Tales from the front line, by Jackie Sprague
- Flaws in the grand plan, by Tony Phillips
- Expect the unexpected, by Judith Orr
LETTERS
- A matter of taste, from Jennifer Anderson
- Critical friend, from John Saville
- Miliband’s legacy, from Leo Zeilig
- A political puzzle, from Keith Flett
- Nonsense on stilts, from Raymond Challinor
- Courting victory, from Tom Delargy
TALKBACK
- Dangerous animals, by Gary McFarlane
- Housewives choice, by Sarah Finnegan
STACK ON THE BACK
- An attitude problem, by Pat Stack
No. 178, September 1994
Socialist Review
Editor:
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by:
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
DUNCAN BLACKIE
SABBY SAGALL
CHRIS NINEHAM
KATE LORD
PATRICK CONNELLAN
Business:
HAZEL CROFT
JUDITH ORR
Reviews:
HAZEL CROFT
NOTES OF THE MONTH
- Rail strike: Time to make them pay
- France: Unholy terror
- Italy: Mr Clean’s dirty hands
- Ireland: A place at the table?
FEATURES
All aboard for the class struggle? by Pat Dunne, Jane Loftus, Margot Hill et al. (discussion)
The hope and the horror, by Simon Hester & Manny Tanoh
Pedigree of a pitbull, by Chris Nineham
A powerful combination, by Lee Humber
Good breeding? by Phil Gasper
- More than its parts, by John Baxter
Revolution in the air, by Chanie Rosenberg
A bitter pill, by Andrea Butcher
REGULARS
Thinking it through
- Controls and conflicts, by Chris Harman
Briefing: Unions – Gathering pace
My favourite books, by Duncan Campbell
Letter from the US
- Dogs bite back, by Sharon Smith
REVIEWS
Theatre
- No chance to walk away, by Lee Humber
- Crocodile tears, by Kevin Ovenden
- Two out of three, by Mark Brown
Film
- Killer with a badge, by Chris Chilvers
- A slice of the cake, by John Barrie
Festival
- End of an ideal, by Lee Humber
Books
- Equal rights or liberation? by Rose Wilson
- No place like home, by Megan Trudell
- Both sides you lose, by Simon Joyce
- Torn up by the roots, by Charlie Hore
- A filthy pool, by David Firebrook
- Method in his madness, by Alex Callinicos
- Occupational hazards, by Maureen Levin
- Pact with the devil, by Gareth Jenkins
- Class of her own, by Jane Lewis
LETTERS
- Don’t rubbish the left, from John Nicholson
- Not a question of guilt, from Susie Helme
- Life on the ocean wave, from Steve Cushion
- History’s rich cocktail, from Neil Faulkner
TALKBACK
- Niceness is not enough, by Joseph Bord
- Hitting the wrong note, by Paul Jenkins
STACK ON THE BACK
- Rank corruption, by Pat Stack
No. 179, October 1994
Socialist Review
Editor:
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by:
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
DUNCAN BLACKIE
SABBY SAGALL
CHRIS NINEHAM
KATE LORD
PATRICK CONNELLAN
Business:
PETER MORGAN
JUDITH ORR
Reviews;
PETER MORGAN
NOTES OF THE MONTH
- Strikes: The beginning not the end
- Criminal Justice Bill: It’s all against the law
- Students: Debt drop outs
FEATURES
Following the leader, by Tony Benn et al.
- Ten things everyone should know about the Labour Party, by Paul Foot
Ireland: what price peace? by Eamonn McCann & Goretti Horgan
False consciousness, by Alex Callinicos (obituary)
It’s only natural, by Chris Nineham
The power of ordinary people, by Mike Mansfield (interview)
Eight days a week? by Judith Orr
Expressions of horror, by Chris Bambery
Community cares, by Martin Smith
REGULARS
Thinking it through
- Only skin deep, by Chris Harman
Briefing: Haiti – Clear and present danger
Letter from the US
- Dictator’s terms, by Sharon Smith
My favourite books, by Phoebe Watkins
REVIEWS
Theatre
- Ransomed republic, by Shaun Doherty
- Melted pot, by Gary McFarlane
Film
- History happens, by Charlie Hore
- Caught in the web, by Anne Cooper
- Child’s Play, by Pete Morgan
Books
- Part of the union, by Paul Holborow
- Chinks in the armour, by Jack Robertson
- Paramilitary pressure, by Judith Orr
- The flickering flame, by Martin Smith
- Push or pull? by Kevin Ovenden
- Death knell of democracy, by Pat Riordan
- The vicious circle, by Fran Cetti
- Early learning, by John Parrington
LETTERS
- Voices from death row, from Peter Linebaugh
from David Stoker
from Gary L. Sterling - The numbers game, from Ian Ellis
- ‘Blood will tell’, from Matt Staples
TALKBACK
- The Saatchi strategy, by Ben Selwyn
- Witness to murder, by George Coombs
STACK ON THE BACK
- Past imperfect, by Pat Stack
No. 180, November 1994
Socialist Review
Editor:
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by:
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
DUNCAN BLACKIE
SABBY SAGALL
CHRIS NINEHAM
KATE LORD
PATRICK CONNELLAN
Business:
PETER MORGAN
JUDITH ORR
Reviews:
PETER MORGAN
NOTES OF THE MONTH
- Corruption: The worst money can buy
- Criminal Justice: Top people’s police
- Parliamentary privilege, by Paul Foot
- Europe: Bonfire of the certainties
FEATURES
Who cares? by social workers and someone who was in care
Hidden depths, by Clare Fermont
- The payback, by Stuart Ash
Not long to reign over us? by Judith Orr & Lindsey German
- Off with their heads, by Pat Stack
Children: The best years of their lives? by Mike Rosen
Subordinate clause, by Gareth Jenkins
The promised land, by Chris Bambery
REGULARS
Thinking it through
- Behind the veil, by Chris Harman
Briefing: Crime – On the fiddle
My favourite books, by Morris Beckman
Letter from the US
- Recovery for the rich, by Sharon Smith
REVIEWS
Film
- Mary’s monster, by Judy Cox
- How the west was wrecked, by Leo Zelig
- Madness with a meaning, by Sabby Sagall
TV
- Cracking up or cracking down, by Lindsey German
Photography
- Every picture tells a story, by Ian Goodyer
Books
- Struggling through the fog, by Alex Callinicos
- No saviours from on high, by Albie Lithgow
- The people’s poets, by Tony Dabb
- Stolen jewel, by John Barrie
- The search for satisfaction, by Lindi Gonzalez
- The wild one, by Martin Jones
- White wash, by Nicolai Gentchev
- Spoken from the heart, by Phil Turner
- Terminate a Tory, by Pete Morgan
- It’s only a game, by Mark Steel
- Unnatural punishments, by Austin Challen
LETTERS
- Talking down disaster, by Stirling Howieson
- Why did Kohl win? by Dirk Harmann
- Beyond our control? by Tom Hurlock
TALKBACK
- They make you sick, by Anne Kenfeck
STACK ON THE BACK
- If you believe that times have changed, by Pat Stack
No. 181, December 1994
Socialist Review
Editor:
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by:
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
DUNCAN BLACKIE
SABBY SAGALL
CHRIS NINEHAM
PATRICK CONNELLAN
Business:
PETER MORGAN
JUDITH ORR
Reviews:
PETER MORGAN
NOTES OF THE MONTH
FEATURES
Poverty: what’s changed? by Dave Beecham
Guilty party, by Harry Fletcher (interview)
Year of peace? Historic compromises
- South Africa, by Alex Callinicos
- Palestine, by Mike Simons
- Ireland, by Judith Orr
Rotten barrel, by Gareth Jenkins
Letter from Italy
- Roman holiday, by David Firebrook
A living nightmare, by Raphael Rowe
France: Liberty and equality? from Socialisme Internationale
King of the jungle, by Michael Rosen
REGULARS
Briefing: Famine – Food for thought
Thinking it through
- Third time lucky, by Chris Harman
Letter from the US
- No return to Reagan, by Sharon Smith
My favourite books, by Nigel Flanagan
REVIEWS
- Licensed to kill, by Tom Lewis
- Fire Power, by Sabby Sagall
Videos
Theatre
- Vertical divisions, by Patrick Connellan
TV
- Our secret history, by Duncan Blackie
Books
- Marx’s other half, by Pete Morgan
- Under mined, by Chris Chilvers
- Cruel cargo, by Judith Lyons
- A time of dying, by Chris Bambery
- Righteous republicans, by Alex Callinicos
- The rule of law, by William Alderson
- Tamed by television, by Chris Nineham
LETTERS
- Veiled attack, from Jamie Rankin
- Genetically gay, from Martin Empson
- Prejudice can be fought, by John Appleyard
TALKBACK
- Blue is the colour, by Ged Peck
STACK ON THE BACK
- Back door bigots, by Pat Stack
No. 182, January 1995
Socialist Review
Editor:
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by:
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
DUNCAN BLACKIE
SABBY SAGALL
CHRIS NINEHAM
PATRICK CONNELLAN
Business:
PETER MORGAN
JUDITH ORR
Reviews:
PETER MORGAN
NOTES OF THE MONTH:
FEATURES:
Decline and fall, by Chris Bambery
Mexico: Free trade troubles, by Mike Gonzalez
Italy: Falling idol, by Lindsey German
Heroes and villains, by Dave Beecham
Heading for divorce? by Goretti Horgan
Yeltsin’s nightmare, by a Russian Socialist
- A people torn apart, by Nicolai Gentchev
Russia’s revolutionary year, by Pete Morgan
A helping hand to Hitler, by Henry Maitles
REGULARS:
Briefing: Judges – A job for life
Thinking it through:
- Just a matter of time, by Chris Harman
Letter from the US:
- Alarm bells, by Sharon Smith
My favourite books, by Gerry Gable
REVIEWS:
Film:
- Thumbs down, by Megan Trudell
- Vampire with style, by Tim Sanders
Theatre:
- Absurd reality, by Weyman Bennett
- Missing the point, by Chris Harman
- Six men and a play, by Alex Bourn
Photography:
Books:
- Touching base, by Chris Harman
- Journey’s end? by Sasha Simic
- Darwin’s bulldog, by Matt Staples
- Black and proud, by Yuri Prasad
- Part correct, by Moira Nolan
- Second-rate shopkeepers, by Andy Player
- Not happy ever after, by Claire Faichnie
LETTERS:
- Stress management, from Al Rainnie
- In defence of pulp, from Ian Goodyer
- Violent disagreement, from Mark Brown
- Express opinion, from Tony Chilvers & Chris Chilvers
- Oppressor or liberator? from Phil Beardmore
- Hunger for profits, from Kevin Mannerings
TALKBACK:
- Child’s play, by M. Chay
- Table talk, by Dave Skidmore
STACK ON THE BACK:
- Back to the future, by Pat Stack
No. 183, February 1995
Socialist Review
Editor:
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by:
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
DUNCAN BLACKIE
SABBY SAGALL
CHRIS NINEHAM
PATRICK CONNELLAN
Business:
PETER MORGAN
JUDITH ORR
Reviews:
PETER MORGAN
NOTES OF THE MONTH:
FEATURES:
Can the right let rip? by Lindsey German
- A nation of shareholders?
- Going public, by Peter Morgan
Equal access, by Pat Stack
In the balance, by Tony Cliff
Human sacrifice, by Margot Hill
Dangerous occupation, by Sabby Sagall
Obituary: Peter Cook: Not enough Cooks, by Dave Beecham
Topping fun? by Jack Robertson
REGULARS:
Briefing: Drugs – An expensive habit
Thinking it through:
- Mexican wave, by Chris Harman
Letter from the US:
- No newt is good newt, by Sharon Smith
My favourite books, by Candy Udwin
REVIEWS:
Film:
- Shallow is the word, by John Rees
- Supernatural born killers, by Mubin Haq
Theatre:
- Family favourites, by Lee Humber
Music:
- More than a prayer, by Mark Brown
Books:
- The real American dream, by Martin Smith
- Fitting testament, by Brian Richardson
- Open and shut case, by William Alderson
- Capital gains, by Chris Harman
- Broken backed, by Ian Mitchell
- Sour fruit, by Tony Dabb
- Thieves fall in, by Mark Thomas
- Sense of guilt, by Neal Smith
- No stranger perspective, by Maureen Levin
- Life on death row, by Sharon Geoghegan
LETTERS:
- The profits from appeasement, from Ged Peck
- Two roars for Disney, from Howard Medwell
- The route to a riot
- Beyond the horizon, from Mike Wayne
- Pressure points, from Keith Flett
- Keep your distance, from Sabby Sagall
TALKBACK:
- Assault and battery, by Zoe Camenzuli
- Save our bacon, by Matt Staples
STACK ON THE BACK:
- Brain dead, by Pat Stack
No. 184, March 1995
Socialist Review
Editor:
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by:
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
DUNCAN BLACKIE
SABBY SAGALL
CHRIS NINEHAM
PATRICK CONNELLAN
Business:
PETER MORGAN
JUDITH ORR
Reviews:
PETER MORGAN
NOTES OF THE MONTH:
- Education: Last cut is the deepest
- Ireland: Union blues
- Social Trends: Lies, damned lies ..., by Paul McGarr
SPECIAL FEATURE:
Solidarity: How to rebuild the unions, compiled by John Rees
FEATURES:
Breaking China, by Charlie Hore
The women’s army, by Judith Orr
Spain: Going, going, gone? by Andy Durgan
Television: In a class of their own? by Chris Nineham
Information tollroad, by Duncan Blackie
REGULARS:
Briefing: Europe – Winners take all
Thinking it through:
- Continental drift, by Chris Harman
Letter from the US:
- Contract killers, by Sharon Smith
My favourite books, by Sheila Whitaker
REVIEWS:
Theatre:
- Sex, lies and tabloid tales, by Ruth James
Film:
- Caste aside, by Sam Ashman (interview)
- Blood wedding, by Judy Cox
- The crazy gang, by Megan Trudell
- Lesbian and Gay film festival
Books:
- They would not go quietly, by Martin Jones
- Blair’s road to revolution, by John Rees
- A welcome intrusion, by Dave Beecham
- Right on target, by Alex Callinicos
- Limited vision, by Moira Nolan
- Novel approach, by Chris Harman
- Thug on the Tyne, by Linda Carruthers
LETTERS:
- On the bottom step, from Luke Stobart
- Disabling society, from Becky Shtasel
- The animal alphabet, from Neil Faulkner
- Out of time, from Raymond Challinor
- Through English eyes, from Peter Mulligan
- No brick wall, from Nigel Haynes Fairbridge
- Disney’s world, from John Parrington
TALKBACK:
- Trial and error, by John Witzenfeld
STACK ON THE BACK:
- Begging your pardon, by Pat Stack
No. 185, April 1995
Socialist Review
Editor:
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by:
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
DUNCAN BLACKIE
SABBY SAGALL
CHRIS NINEHAM
PATRICK CONNELLAN
Business:
PETER MORGAN
JUDITH ORR
Reviews:
PETER MORGAN
NOTES OF THE MONTH:
- Editorial: How right can you get?
- Mexico: Going for broke, by Lance Selfa
- Briefing: Food
- Immigration: Border lies, by Chris Nineham
- Welling Trials: Candid cameras, by Claire Dissington
- Out on a limb, by Judith Orr
- Death Row: In the wrong place, from Brian K. Roberson
- Germany: Striking while the iron is hot, by Kevin Ovenden
FEATURES:
Eastenders: Have they knocked out the Nazis? by Martin Smith
Light at the end of the tunnel, by Lee Humber & Gareth Jenkins
Babes, Barbie and the battle of the sexes, by Lindsey German
Official secrets, by Tony Dabb
Plays for Today, by Trevor Griffith (interview by Sabby Sagall)
REGULARS:
Thinking it through:
- A fair day’s work ..., by Chris Harman
Letter from the US:
- Positively unfair, by Sharon Smith
My favourite books, by Benjamin Zephaniah
REVIEWS:
Theatre:
- Sight for sore eyes, by John Rees
- Behind the golden door, by Patrick Connellan
Art:
- Ghosts of the past, by Maureen Levin
Film:
- Church times, by Moira Nolan
- Tough luck, by Peter Morgan
- Home in exile, by Tim Sanders
- War of independence, by Mary Phillips
Video:
- Finding a voice, by Ian Goodyer
Books:
- ‘World revolution and happiness for all’, by Chanie Rosenberg
- Black to basics, by Talat Ahmed
- Whose heritage? by Lindsey German
- Travellers’ tales, by Hassan Mahamdallie
- Revolutionary riches, by John Newsinger
- Hungry for change, by Chris Bambery
- In the name of the father, by Mike Evans
- View from the edge, by James Fraser
- Rebels with a cause, by Judith Lyons
- Heroines on the high seas, by Anna Robinson
LETTERS:
- Under the influence, from Brian Dickinson
- Dabbling in Disney, from Michael Rosen
- Continental clause, from John Partington
TALKBACK:
- Appliance of science, by Bill Spence
STACK ON THE BACK:
- Mind the language, by Pat Stack
No. 186, May 1995
Socialist Review
Editor:
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by:
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
DUNCAN BLACKIE
SABBY SAGALL
CHRIS NINEHAM
PATRICK CONNELLAN
KEVIN OVENDEN
Business:
PETER MORGAN
JUDITH ORR
Reviews:
PETER MORGAN
NOTES OF THE MONTH:
- Editorial: Mind the gap
- Arms dealing: Will they get off Scott free? by Paul Foot
- Kurds: Turkish bloodbath, by Junate Black
- Truancy: A punishing regime, by Lynne Hopper
- Obituary: Hilda Upward, by David Allison
- Briefing: Media ownership
- France: Polls apart, by Lee Humber
- Lecturers: Silver standard, by Seth Harman
- Contracts countdown
SPECIAL FEATURE: Second World War
A soldier’s story, by Duncan Hallas (interview)
What were they fighting for? by Lindsey German
Red flags and reluctant revolutionaries, by Duncan Blackie
FEATURES:
Identity crisis, by Sue Caldwell
Community without care, by Alex Callinicos
- ‘A right to exist, but only exist’, by Gareth Jenkins
A man of some importance, by Colin Wilson
REGULARS:
Thinking it through:
- A tale of two parties, by Chris Harman
Letter from the US:
- American graffiti, by Sharon Smith
My favourite books, by John Tipple
REVIEWS:
Film:
- Too long in exile, by Mike Gonzalez
- Royal reversal, by Liz Rattue
- Screen tests, by Liz Wheatley
- Jumping through hoops, by Harold Wilson
Theatre:
- A cautionary tale, by Judith Orr (interview)
- Prophet of doom, by Lindsey German
- Flawed at the core, by Shaun Doherty
- A tangled web, by Andrea Butcher
Books:
- Last word on Malcolm, by Talat Ahmed
- Fired by the famine, by Pat Stack
- Out of sympathy, by John Baxter
- Theatre of revolution, by Andy Stafford
- Before disgraceland, by Neil Davidson
- Trotsky as icon, by John Molyneux
- Levellers in arms, by John Brown
- History for the taking, by Nicolai Gentchev
- Long in the tooth, by Megan Trudell
- Tune in, drop out, by Dave Renton
Letters
- Not what they died for, from Liam Duffy
- They can’t pull the plug, from Ian Fanning
- Sour apple, from John Parrington
- Failing framework, from Keith Flett
- Sorry! from ICP
- Organising the good guys, from Jo Holland
- The great escaper, from Andy Russell
Stack on the back
- The new barbarians, by Pat Stack
No. 187, June 1995
Socialist Review
Editor:
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by:
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
DUNCAN BLACKIE
SABBY SAGALL
CHRIS NINEHAM
PATRICK CONNELLAN
KEVIN OVENDEN
Business:
PETER MORGAN
JUDITH ORR
Reviews:
PETER MORGAN
Tories in crisis special
NOTES OF THE MONTH:
- Editorial: Labour means business
- Brazil: Credit where it’s due?
- Briefing: Class sizes
- Nolan report: School for scandal, by Lindsey German
- Behind bars: Blue steel, by Weyman Bennett
- Gay Pride: Pride and prejudice, by Kath Jennings
- Nuclear sell off: Power failure, by Mike Simons
- Pensions: Inequitable life, by Dave Firebrook
- Divorce: Just a quickie, by Judith Orr
FEATURES:
The big match, by Dave Sherry
The forgotten fighters, by Gareth Jenkins
Is there an alternative to the market?
Strained relations, by Claude Moraes (interview)
The red years, by Chris Bambery
Obituary: Harold Wilson – Pipe dreams, by Paul Foot
REGULARS:
My favourite books, by Mike Mansfield
Letter from the US:
- Home grown terror, by Sharon Smith
REVIEWS:
Film:
- The revenge of history, by Andy Durgan
- Monarch of the glen, by John Brown
- Child’s play, by Weyman Bennett
- A Great Day in Harlem, by Judith Orr
Exhibition:
- House on the prairie, by Alan Gibson
Theatre:
- A bitter taste, by Kevin Ovenden
Books:
- Revolting communities? by John Rees
- Island accommodation, by Tracy Syvret
- Contradictions of consent, by Diana Swingler
- Bingo for Gringos, by Kevin Orr
- Poverty of patriarchy, by Hazel Croft
- Wayne’s world? by Alison Woodmason
- Blackboard bungle, by Suzanne Jeffery
- View from the top, by Danny Faith
- Fire across the channel, by Andy Stafford
- Tough at the top? by Al Rainnie
- The future behind us, by Chris Rowell
- The real Eastenders, by Guy Taylor
- Benn’s elegy, by Angela Stapleford
- Taken to the cleaners, by John Barrie
LETTERS:
- A good match? from Pete Moore
- Blurred vision, from John Partington
- A life line, from John Chilvers and comrades
- Practical solidarity, from Dave Davis
MARXISM 95
STACK ON THE BACK
- The waiting game, by Pat Stack
No. 188, July/August 1995
Socialist Review
Editor:
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by:
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
DUNCAN BLACKIE
SABBY SAGALL
CHRIS NINEHAM
PATRICK CONNELLAN
KEVIN OVENDEN
Business:
PETER MORGAN
JUDITH ORR
Reviews:
PETER MORGAN
NOTES OF THE MONTH
Tories in crisis special
- Editorial: The backstabbers
- The government that devoured itself, by Paul Foot
- Europe: Third Division
- Far right: Top of the populists
- Economy: Hungover after all these years
- Labour: Something borrowed, something blue, by Judith Orr
- Labour and health: Breach of trust, by Chris Nineham
FEATURES
War without end? by Duncan Blackie
Why create a scene? by Kevin Ovenden and Jane Lewis
Dark clouds over Bombay, by Parvinder Bhuller
‘There is no power in the world that could resist the British working class organised as a body’, by Frederick Engels
- The destroyer of worlds, by Chris Nineham
REGULARS
Thinking it through
- A term of abuse? by Chris Harman
My favourite books, by Fran Crowhurst
Letter from the US
- Bouncing back, by Sharon Smith
REVIEWS
Film
- My favourite films, by various authors
Michael Rosen
Andrea Butcher
John Rees
Alex Callinicos
Lindsey German
Clare Fewrmont
Chris Bambery
Judith Orr
Liz Wheatley
Chris Chilver
Martin Smith
Megan Trudell
Mark Brown
Sharon Smith
Gareth Jenkins
Sabby Sagall
Johnny Clarke
Maria Hoyle
Pete Morgan
Chris Harman
Chris Nineham
Theatre
- Red tales in the sunset, by Pat Quinn (interview)
- Collector’s item, by Mark Brown
Exhibition
- Shades of grey
Books
- The fighting forties, by John Charlton
- Continuity and change, by Julie Waterson
- Outside left, by David Renton
- Caught in the act, by Sean McSweeny
- Town and country, by Chris Harman
- >Unfinished business, by Judith Orr
- Blunt instrument, by Alex Callinicos
- A portrait with no frame, by Sue Caldwell
- Crossed lines, by Michele Golden
- A world to win, by Mani Tanoh
LETTERS
- Opportunity knocks, from John Appleyard
- Safe on the streets? from Vik Konopka
- Public enemy, from Dirk Harmann
TALKBACK
- Bringing the truth home – 1, by Kirsty Craig
- Bringing the truth home – 2, by Tom Howard
STACK ON THE BACK
- Taste of the blues, by Pat Stack
No. 189, September 1995
Socialist Review
Editor:
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by:
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
DUNCAN BLACKIE
SABBY SAGALL
CHRIS NINEHAM
PATRICK CONNELLAN
KEVIN OVENDEN
Business:
PETER MORGAN
JUDITH ORR
Reviews:
PETER MORGAN
NOTES OF THE MONTH
- Editorial: Backlash against Blair
- Minimum wage: What’s it worth? by Phil Turner
- Briefing: Health and unemployment
- O.J. Simpson trial: LAPD blue, by Lindsey Germany
- Police and racism: Prime suspects, by Dean Ryan
- UN conference: Two worlds for women, by Judith Orr
- Ireland: Old wounds, by Chris Bambery
FEATURES
The hunger years, by Pat Stack
Europe’s bloody war, by Lindsey German
- Looking for the good guys, by Gareth Jenkins
- Reluctant soldiers, by Sabby Sagall
The empire strikes back, by John Newsinger
Domestic violence, by Abbie Bakan
Obituary: Ernest Mandel: Contradictory states, by John Molyneux
REGULARS
Thinking it through
- Hitting the high notes, by Chris Harman
My favourite books, by Judith Williamson
Letter from the US
- Slaughter of the innocents, by Sharon Smith
REVIEWS
Film
´
- Basket Work, interview with Frederick Marx, conducted by Helen Redmond
- For king and country, by Judy Cox
Theatre
- Two men on a boat, by Kevin Ovenden
- Facts behind the fiction, by Mark Brown
- Spanner in the works, by Helen Shooter
Photographs
- Sanitation Workers Assemble – 28 March 1968
Books
- Against all odds, by Dave Davies
- Stealing their thunder, by Andy Player
- Taste of freedom, by Chris Bambery
- Tourist attraction, by Sean McSweeney
- A class apart, by Lindsey German
- Party time, by Danny McGowan
- Novel realism, by Gareth Jenkins
- What the doctor ordered, by Judith Lyons
- Join the club, by Nick Wall
LETTERS
- Bashing bigotry, from Mark Brown
- Systematic division, from Brian Roberson
- Part of the union, from Bruce Levy
- Mother courage, from Megan Trudell
TALKBACK
- Spark of resistance, by Colin Barker
STACK ON THE BACK
- Who’s sorry now? by Pat Stack
No. 190, October 1995
Socialist Review
Editor:
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by:
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
SABBY SAGALL
CHRIS NINEHAM
PATRICK CONNELLAN
Business:
PETER MORGAN
JUDITH ORR
Reviews:
PETER MORGAN
NOTES OF THE MONTH
- Bosnia: What a carve up
- Korea: Fighting the tiger, by Alex Callinicos
- Briefing: Nuclear testing
- Lottery: The numbers game, by John Newsinger
- Labour: Getting down to business, by Judith Orr
- Wages: On thin ice, by Dave Beecham
- Germany: Who’s spoiling the party? by Kevin Ovenden
FEATURES
Class distinction, by Shaun Doherty
State of terror, by Paul Foot
- ‘... nothing but government sanctioned murder’, by Bettie Roberson
Who will control the 21st century? by John Rees
The red brigades, by Judy Cox
War correspondence, by Clare Fermont
- And after much talking, the bomb stood up ..., by Michael Rosen (poem)
Once upon a time, by Alan Gibbons
REGULARS
Thinking it through
- The theory of poverty, by Chris Harman
Letter from the US
- The rule, by of law, by Sharon Smith
My favourite books, by Maria Hoyle
REVIEWS
Film
´
- Long hot summer, by Alex Callinicos
- Not like the other girls, by Elane Heffernan
- Missing a beat, by Neil Davidson
- What the doctor ordered, by Des Freedman
Theatre
- Shaking all over, by Martin Smith
- >Sounds of black Africa, by Pat Smith
Books
- From Granada to Bombay, by Gareth Jenkins
- No success like failure, by John Newsinger
- Leopard shows his claws, by Martin Smith
- All about Eve, by John Baxter
- The roaring Twenties, by Alex Callinicos
- Mask of anarchy, by Beth Stone
- Silent witness, by Chris Bambery
- One way strip, by Duncan Brown
LETTERS
- Time to take sides? from Alan Woodward
- Time to say no? from Maddy Cooper
- The ones who really suffer, from Sabby Sagall
- Top of the league, from Ian Birchall
- Too many short cuts, from Keith Flett
- School’s out, from Julie Boston
STACK ON THE BACK
- The crying game, by Pat Stack
No. 191, November 1995
Socialist Review
Editor:
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by:
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
SABBY SAGALL
CHRIS NINEHAM
IAN TAYLOR
JUDITH ORR
PETER MORGAN
Business:
PETER MORGAN
JUDITH ORR
Reviews:
PETER MORGAN
NOTES OF THE MONTH
- Editorial: Shadow boxing
- Economy: Money troubles, by Pete Morgan
- Briefing: United Nations
- Further education: Class bullies, by John Rose
- Pill scare: Keep taking the tablets? by Andrea Butcher
- >Scottish Convention: Toothless tiger, by Keir McKechnie & Neil Davidson
FEATURES
A peace of the action, by Mike Simons
Can we afford the welfare state?
- Health, benefits and pensions are too expensive, by Gareth Jenkins
- ‘The meanest social security in the world’, by Pete Morgan
Think of a number
A test you can pass - Treated for health or wealth? by Paul Foot
- Kill or cure, by Ian Taylor
Torn asunder, by Marnie Holborow
Obituary: Striking flint, interview with Genora (Johnson) Dollinger, conducted by Susan Rosenthal
Public enemies? by Talat Ahmed
Still miles apart, by Charlie Kimber
REGULARS
Thinking it through
- No ‘liberation’ in Bosnia, by Chris Harman
Letter from the US
- On the road again, by Sharon Smith
My favourite books, by Bruce Kent
REVIEWS
Film
´
- French resistance, by Hassan Mahamdallie
- Poetry in motion, by Alex Callinicos
Art
- Through western eyes, by Ken Olende
Theatre
- The other empire, by Gareth Jenkins
- Mistaken identity, by Chris Harman
Books
- Smooth ride to the top, by Kevin Ovenden
- Eastern eye, by Mark O’Brien
- Screen tested, by Liz Wheatley
- Rule of the rope, by Pete Waters
- Rumbles and grumbles, by Chris Nineham
- The illusion of democracy, by Sabby Sagall
- Religious experience, by Guy Taylor
- Taste of rebellion, by Dave Barnes
- No shelter from the storm, by Steve Bassindale
LETTERS
- Who will punish them? from Paul Graham
- No national liberation, from Damir Ceric
- Heart in the right place, from Chris Bambery
- Orgy of macho violence, from Alex Law
STACK ON THE BACK
- Into the wild blue yonder, by Pat Stack
No. 192, December 1995
Socialist Review
Editor:
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by:
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
SABBY SAGALL
CHRIS NINEHAM
IAN TAYLOR
JUDITH ORR
PETER MORGAN
Business:
PETER MORGAN
JUDITH ORR
Reviews:
PETER MORGAN
NOTES OF THE MONTH
- Editorial: Desperate measures
- Industry: Hidden Anger
- Briefing: Advertising
- Scargill: Ayes to the left
- Drugs: Overdose of hyprocisy, by Lee Humber
- Judges: Judges’ ruling, by Paul Foot
- France: A whiff of 1968, by Gareth Jenkins
- Bosnia: Peace by partition
FEATURES
Staying power, interview with Lola Onibiyo, conducted by Peter Morgan
A death foretold, by Mike Simons
Age of extremes, by Chris Nineham
Unlimited company, by Dave Beecham
The people’s poet, by Judy Cox
No place like home? by Lindsey German
Between the lines
- Novels
- History
- Biographies
- Politics
- Miscellaneous
- Children’s books 0–5
- Children’s books 5–8
Obituary: Gwynn Williams: The dragon’s roar, by Martin John
REGULARS
Thinking it through
- Brutal symmetry, by Chris Harman
Letter from the US
- Fighting talk, by Sharon Smith
REVIEWS
Music
´
- Yesterday’s heroes, by Pat Stack
Theatre
- Still in the dark ages, by Clare Fermont
Films
- Tough on crime? by Lindsey German
- Coming up for air, by Sabby Sagall
Books
- Insider dealing, by Chris Bambery
- The century’s bloody birth, by Collin Mooers
- The killing fields, by Pat Stocker
- Caught in the web, by Sheila McGregor
- Never ending story, by John Saville
- Tide of emotion, by Beth Stone
- Outside the law, by Andy Player
- Leader of the gang, by Gaverne Bennett
LETTERS
- Protect and survive, from Beth Armstrong
- Health or wealth? from Dave Allinson
- Care and the community, from Brian Roberson
STACK ON THE BACK
- Dangerous games, by Pat Stack
No. 193, January 1996
Socialist Review
Editor
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
SABBY SAGALL
LEE HUMBER
IAN TAYLOR
JUDITH ORR
PETER MORGAN
Business
PETER MORGAN
JUDITH ORR
Reviews
PETER MORGAN
SPECIAL ISSUE
France’s red hot winter, compiled by Lindsey German, Gareth Jenkins, Judith Orr, Peter Morgan, John Burton & Paul McGarr
- Not what Juppé planned
- The limits of the left
- The critical mass
- United we stand
- Fighting talk
- The will of the people
- On the tight track
- Striking for workers’ power
FEATURES
True or false? by Mac McKenna & Julie Waterson
A tale of two strikes, interviews conducted by Elane Heffernan Violent disorder, by Judith Orr North South divide, by Chris Bambery Guilty by suspicion, interview with Robert Meeropol, son of Ethel and Julius Rosenberg, conducted by Ashley Smith REGULARS Thinking it through
- Back in business, by Chris Harman
Letter from the US
- Slash and grab, by Sharon Smith
My favourite books, by Dave Carr
REVIEWS
Film
- In sickness and in health, by Claire Dissington
- Obituary: Independent Spirit, by Margot Hill
Theatre
- Play for today, by Phil Beardsmore
Books
- Blighted history, by Pat Stack
- Structural damage, by Nicolai Gentchev
- Live export, by Julie Waterson
- Historic movements, by Alex Callinicos
- Past and present, by Rob Morgan
- Border crossing, by Gareth Jenkins
- Torture treatment, by Danny Faith
- Nlured vision, by Hassan Mahamdallie
- Hitting the right note, by Mike Hobart
- Flexible friends, by Andrea Butcher
LETTERS
- Moral panic, from Hazel Croft
- On the right track? from Weyman Bennett
- Not my sisters, from Fi Frances
- Top of the class, from Solomon Hughes
- Alive and kicking, from Steve Arthur
- Unusual suspect, from Keith Flett
- Defence of the realm, from David Kurt
STACK ON THE BACK
- Every one’s a winner, by Pat Stack
No. 194, February 1996
Socialist Review
Editor
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
SABBY SAGALL
CHRIS NINEHAM
IAN TAYLOR
JUDITH ORR
PETER MORGAN
Business
PETER MORGAN
JUDITH ORR
Reviews
PETER MORGAN
NOTES OF THE MONTH
- Editorial: In black and white
- Living standards; Food for thought, by Judith Orr
- Waste disposal, by Paul Foot
- France: Not the end of the line, by Lindsey German
- Palestine: The five percent state, by John Rose
- Tower of strength, by Martin John
- Germany: No more miracles, by Kevin Ovenden
FEATURES
Should socialists leave the Labour Party?
- John Rees
- Mark Seddon
Does Scargill have an alternative? by Lindsey German
Obituary: In the name of the rose, by Gareth Jenkins
A cause worth fighting for, interview with Bernard McKenna, conducted by Andy Coles
No News is good news, by a print worker
Follow your leaders? by Sabby Sagall
REGULARS
Thinking it through
- Beyond the boundary, by Chris Harman
Letter from the US
- Right off balance, by Sharon Smith
My favourite books, by Victoria Brittain
REVIEWS
Film
- Hot fire, by John Rees
- The never ending story, by Alex Callinicos
TV
- Still the first casualty, by Clare Fermont
- Out of this world, by Pat Stack
Theatre
- It takes two to tango, by Judith Lyon
Books
- The art of revolution, by John Newsinger
- A time to remember, by Unjum Mirza
- Northern star, by Chris Harman
- Production line prose, by Eamonn Kelly
- The enemy within, by Chris Bambery
- On Europe’s margins, by Kevin Orr
- The meat market, by Chanie Rosenberg
- They’ve had their chips, by Seth Harman
- Self defence classes, by Chris Dissington
LETTERS
- Between the lines, from Charlie Hore
- A world turned upside down, from Bernhard Herzberg
- Poor record, from Patrick Connellan
Stack on the back
- Kicking the habit, by Pat Stack
No. 195, March 1996
Socialist Review
Editor
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
SABBY SAGALL
CHRIS NINEHAM
IAN TAYLOR
JUDITH ORR
PETER MORGAN
Business
PETER MORGAN
JUDITH ORR
Reviews
PETER MORGAN
NOTES OF THE MONTH
- Editorial: The twilight zone
- Australian election: One of us? by Peter Morgan
- International Women’s Day: Not playing by the rules, by Hazel Croft
- Student loans: Pay as you learn, by Fiona Prior
- Councils: The spring offensive, by Chris Nineham
- Public sector pay: Beyond the fragments, by Stuart Ash
- Scotland: Tartan track, by Keir McKechnie
FEATURES
Armed and dangerous, by Paul Foot
Solidarity in any language, by John Bell
Unfinished business, interview with Eamonn McCann, conducted by Lindsey German
- Why Major didn’t give peace a chance, by Chris Bambery
Selective memories, by Michael Rosen
- Schools for scandal, by Shaun Doherty
- [Comprehensive education], interview with Caroline Benn
Siberian tigers, interview with a socialist living in the Kuzbass, conducted by Gareth Jenkins
REGULARS
Thinking it through
- A nation once again? by Chris Harman
Letter from the US:
- Primary lessons, by Sharon Smith
REVIEWS
Theatre
- Waiting room of history, by Gaverne Bennett
- Day dreaming, by Chanie Rosenberg
- Observe the sons of Ulster is marching ...
- Ghosts in the machine, by Chris Harman
Music
- Song of the new Oakies, by Alan Maass
Exhibition
- Modern language, by Steve Bassendale
- [The private art of Paul Cézanne], by Paul Furness
TV/Film
- Fine brush on ivory, by Jane Bassett
- High stakes all round, by Liz Wheatley
Books
- Leap into the dark, by Charlie Hore
- Through hell and high water, by Beth Stone
- Friends at the top, by Dave Renton
- Back to Old Corruption, by John Newsinger
- New prejudices for old, by Judith Orr
- The shock of the new, by Paul Brook
- Down to earth, by Matt Foot
- Tools of the trade, by Paul Webster
- In dubious battle, by Pat Riordan
- Rave review? by Ben Watson
LETTERS
- Left on the sidelines, from Unjum Mirza
- Quantity into quality? from Bob Fotherigham
- The mystery ten precent, from Alan Watts
- Murder revelations, from Clive Hopkins
- More than a grain of truth, from Adrian Budd
- On the waterfront, from Helen Shooter
- Failing eyesight, from John Rose
STACK ON THE BACK
- Opposites attract, by Pat Stack
No. 196, April 1996
Socialist Review
Editor
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
SABBY SAGALL
CHRIS NINEHAM
IAN TAYLOR
JUDITH ORR
PETER MORGAN
Business
PETER MORGAN
JUDITH ORR
Reviews
PETER MORGAN
NOTES OF THE MONTH
- Editorial: Councils of war
- Dunblane: Inexplicable evil? by Lindsey Germany
- Taiwan: China syndrome, by Charlie Hore
- Contraception update: Swallowing the bitter poll, by Judith Orr
- Questions on European Union: One for the money, by Alex Callinicos
- Tanker disaster: No safe haven, by Peter Morgan
- Palestine: Reversal of fortune, by Mike Simons
FEATURES
The great train robbery, by Sabby Sagall
- Road rage
- Green light for danger
- Profit at the margins
- More cost, no benefits
Socialist by design, by Chris Nineham
- Questioning the legacy
The intelligence fraud, by John Parrington
Left, right and centre, by Paul Brook
- Spanish stand off, by Miguel Cabrillana & Steve Cedar
The market man, by Clare Fermont
Highlanders’ last fling, by Neil Davidson
REGULARS
Thinking it through
- People in class houses, by Chris Harman
Letter from the US:
- Danger zone, by Sharon Smith
My favourite books, by Roy Battersby
REVIEWS
Film
- Good for your health, by Nicola Field
- Sophie’s world, by Alex Callinicos
- A crowded marriage, by Sarah Allen
Exhibition
- Screen prints, by Patrick Connellan
- Rank outsiders, by Paula Champion
Theatre
- In an Irish town, by Martin Valentine
Books
- Street wise, by Margot Hill
- Lost and found, by Julie Waterson
- Action is the life of all, by Lee Humber
- Collision course, by John Baxter
- The vicious circle, by Chris Harman
- Free as a bird? by Elane Heffernan
- Mr Average goes to war, by Pat Stack
- Blame where it lies, by Unjum Mirza
LETTERS
- Taking sides ..., from Andy Bremmer
- ... both sides of the border, from Duncan Brown
- Nothing to offer, from Sheila McGregor
- Cut the crap, from Kevin Ovenden
- Bruce – worthy but dull, f_rom Colin Wilson_
- Stars in our eyes? from Ben Watson
STACK ON THE BACK
- A past to remember, by Pat Stack
No. 197, May 1996
Socialist Review
Editor
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
SABBY SAGALL
CHRIS NINEHAM
IAN TAYLOR
JUDITH ORR
PETER MORGAN
Business
PETER MORGAN
JUDITH ORR
Reviews
PETER MORGAN
NOTES OF THE MONTH
- Editorial: Question time
- Tax: Welfare for the rich, by Peter Morgan
- South Africa: ANC means business, by Alex Callinicos
- Auschwitz: A place to remember
- Union laws: Caught in the Act, by Lee Humber
FEATURES
When peace means war, by John Rose
Carving up the profits, by Peter Morgan
The empire state, by Dave Crouch
Nine days in May, by Judith Orr
- Big Battle in class war, interview with Eddie Frow, conducted by Sean Vernell
- A brake on our movement, by Leon Trotsky
No place like home, by Chris Harman
The Sun worshippers, by Chris Nineham
REGULARS
Letter from the US
- In the fast lane, by Sharon Smith
My favourite books, by Jeremy Seabrook
REVIEWS
Films
- Predict and survive, by Seth Harman
- Riotous behaviour, by Nicola Field
Exhibition
- Art for the masses, by Mark Brown
Theatre
- Caught in a trap? by Jackie Sprague
- Rights of passage, by Wendy Kipling
Books
- Only selective memory, by Mark Fraenkel
- Dennis the menace, by Gareth Jenkins
- Stand and deliver, by Iain Ferguson
- Kane and able, by Danny Faith
- Only skin deep, by Gaverne Bennett
- The map of progress, by Mark O’Brien
- Double exposure, by Dave Sellars
- Leader of the pack, by John Molyneux
- The sharp divide, by Jacqui Buckley
- Myth and reality, by Sasha Simic
LETTERS
- Not the ticket, from Darren Williams
- Putting on the brakes, from a rail worker
- Let’s have some answers, from Stuart N. Goodman
- Cash limits on education, from Jim Dickson
- Wasted potential, from Keith Flett
- A channel for our anger, from Goretti Horgan
- Docking profits, from Nick Howard
- Class, nation and China, from Hsiao-Hung Pai
- Intemperate and philistine, from Ben Watson
- Just another job? from Mike Hobart
- Star wars, from Peter Keighron
STACK ON THE BACK
- The second coming, by Pat Stack
No. 198, June 1996
Socialist Review
Editor
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
SABBY SAGALL
CHRIS NINEHAM
IAN TAYLOR
JUDITH ORR
PETER MORGAN
Business
PETER MORGAN
JUDITH ORR
Reviews
PETER MORGAN
NOTES OF THE MONTH
- Editorial: The phoney war
- Europe: Convergence means cuts and cuts mean resistance, by Ian Taylor
- Beef: Risky business, by Judith Orr
- Italy: Compromised positions, by Chris Nineham
- Behind Bars: Time is running out, by Peter Morgan
- Post: Red letter day, by Charlie Kimber
- Labour and welfare: More from the poor, by Peter Morgan
FEATURES
What’s gone wrong with education? _by Jane Elderto_n
- Exclusion zone, by John Lockwood
Do women want to stay at home? by Lindsey German
A farewell to arms, by Gareth Jenkins
A place at the table? by Martin Valentine
REGULARS
Thinking it through
- A barbarian apart, by Chris Harman
Letter from the US
- Break for the border, by Sharon Smith
Revolutionary pamphlets
- The struggle for power, by Judith Orr
My favourite books, by Yunus Bahksh
REVIEWS
Art
- Cabbages not kings, by Charlie Kimber
- The Critical Eye, by Clare Fermont
Film
- Wrong number, by Elizabeth Schulte
- One long bad trip, by Maria Hoyle
Television
- A play on words, by Gareth Jenkins
Theatre
- Crime of the century, by Jo Smithman
Books
- Land and freedom, by John Rees
- Howard’s end, by Ian Taylor
- Freedom road, by Brian Richardson
- Halfway to paradise, by Seth Harman
- More questions than answers, by Alex Callinicos
- The pageant of evolution, by Paul McGarr
- Swings and roundabouts, by Dave Sherry
LETTERS
- Vote with eyes open, from Judith Lyons
- Remember the last time, from Phil Taylor
- Not like Tories, from Dave Roberts
- It costs the earth, from Dirk Boeckx
- Monument to the market, from Council worker
- Capital and class, from Peter Green
- A bit of agitation, from Solomon Hughes
- London’s Morris legacy, from J.J. Plant
- Law of the jungle, from Val Dissington
- Torn between two states, from Linda Carruthers & Roger Green
- The people’s music, from Marian Tennison
Correction
STACK ON THE BACK
- Mixed blessings, by Pat Stack
No. 199, July/August 1996
Socialist Review
Editor
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
SABBY SAGALL
CHRIS NINEHAM
IAN TAYLOR
JUDITH ORR
PETER MORGAN
Business
PETER MORGAN
JUDITH ORR
Reviews
PETER MORGAN
NOTES OF THE MONTH
- Editorial: No time like the present
- Asylum: Back in the dock, by Peter Morgan
- Ireland: Dead end street, by Judith Orr
- Defence: Cruising for a bruising
- Russia: No holds barred, by Dave Crouch
- Obituary: Edwin Murumbiwa, by Alex Callinicos
- Middle East: Settlements of war, by Clare Fermont
FEATURES
On top of the world? by Chris Bambery & Alex Callinicos
- How far can they go? by Alex Callinicos
Born or bred? by John Baxter
- The XYY files
Hard times, by Lindsey German
The Spanish revolution – fighting on two fronts, by Andy Durgan
Books for Summer
- Steve Harrison
- Rhona Dodds
- Mark Brown
- James Eaden
- Ken Olende
- Beth Stone
- Phil Turner
- Andrea Butcher
- Nicolai Gentchev
- Sasha Simic
- Jane Lewis
- Ged Peck
- Mark Abel
REGULARS
Thinking it through
- It’s no miracle, by Chris Harman
Revolutionary pamphlets
- From left to centre, by Sean Vernell
Letter from the US
- Man made disaster, by Sharon Smith
REVIEWS
Films
- Over the rainbow, by Phoebe Watkins
- In the blood, by Gaverne Bennett
Exhibition
- City of grit, by Tim Sanders
Books
- In the colonial style, by Paul Foot
- Singing a different tune, by Hazel Croft
- Fight across frontiers, by Clare Fermont
- All roads lead to Rome, by Mary Phillips
- More flea market, by James Eaden
- No stone unturned, by John Rose
- White House blues, by Jonathan Neale
LETTERS
- Just a number, from Terry Ward
- The needs of teachers, from Ralph A. Tebbutt
- Children are victims too, from Nick Gill & Öyvind Brendeland
- Degrees of separation, from David Groves
- What a liberty, from Keith Flett
- The legal gun runners, from Ponchai Wilkerson
- Your money or your life, from Dave Gilchrist
- Making ends meet, from Fiona Prior
STACK ON THE BACK
- The ’if’ word, by Pat Stack
No. 200, September 1996
Socialist Review
Editor
LINDSEY GERMAN
Assisted by
GARETH JENKINS
DAVE BEECHAM
PAUL FOOT
CLARE FERMONT
LEE HUMBER
PAT STACK
MARGOT HILL
SABBY SAGALL
CHRIS NINEHAM
IAN TAYLOR
JUDITH ORR
PETER MORGAN
Business
PETER MORGAN
JUDITH ORR
Reviews
PETER MORGAN
Letter to our readers
NOTES OF THE MONTH
- Editorial: Working majority
- Cyprus: The real dividing line, by Marcos Economou
- Strikes: How does it all add up? by Dave Beecham
- Mars: Is there anybody out there? by John Parrington
- Russia: The war comes home, by Dave Crouch
FEATURES
Socialism since the seventies, by Lindsey German
The hidden power of the media, by John Pilger
Marching against time, by Chris Bambery
The making of Marx, by Sabby Sagall
REGULARS
Letter from the US
- New Democrats, new barbarism, by Sharon Smith
Revolutionary pamphlets
- Daylight robbery, by Gareth Jenkins
REVIEWS
Theatre
- Man made machine, by Lee Humber
Arts
- Poetry in motion, interview with Judith Chernaik
So we’ll go no more a-roving
I taste a liquor never brewed
Exhibition
- New Labour
Films
- Refugee status, by Wayman Bennett
- New town grit, by Alex Wood
- A legal matter, by Sharon Geoghegan
Books
- Whose interest, whose choice? by Andre Butcher
- Southern belle? by Sam Ashman
- Pioneer country, by Chris Nineham
- Killing fields, by David Jenkins
- Working for the rad, by Dave Renton
- Any answers? by Alex Callinicos
- Criminal justice, by Paul Brook
- Sphere of interest, by Gaverne Bennett
- The sky’s the limit, by Rick Wood
LETTERS
- Eternal optimists? from Ed Horton
- With friends like these, from Ian Stewart
- The obstacle race, from Steve Emery
- Count your blessings, from Keeanga Taylor
- Up in arms, from Alex Law & Ray Morrell
- Critical criticism, from Cyril Smith
STACK ON THE BACK
- Eurotrash, by Pat Stack
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