A recent government report concluded that the UK does not have a problem with racism. But history shows us the perils of making such claims
A new Romanian radical right party is resurrecting Romania’s interwar fascism.
We need to be undoing the ideologies that make whiteness and masculinity toxic for us all.
How do memories about fascism and communism shape Romanian identity and party politics?
There is much we can learn from the 1920’s and 1930’s. For example, it was not only his ideas that made Nae Ionescu important for his followers.
Recent successful efforts to repel fascist groups draw on a long history of antifascist mobilisation in Liverpool.
Whereas the stereotypical pro-government voter consumes partisan local media; by contrast, the stereotypical protester in Bucharest owns an iPhone and reads international newspapers online.