Articles Awaab Ishak and the devaluation of migrant, working-class life by  Alexandra Wanjiku Kelbert and Rupinder Parhar  ...
£3.00 The January 2006 edition of the IRR journal Race & Class opens with an essay by A. Sivanandan on the politics of anti-terrorism in Britain after 7/7, continues with Graham Usher's analysis of ...
A. Sivanandan was one of the most important and influential black thinkers in the UK, changing many of the orthodoxies on ‘race’, heading the Institute of Race Relations for almost forty years, ...
£6.00 The April 2024 issue of Race & Class contains cutting-edge articles on the criminal legal system, adding to a growing number of voices and campaigns rejecting the normalisation of systemic ...
On this day in 1979, Awaz (UK Asian women’s collective) + OWAAD (Organisation of Women of African+Asian descent) organised a powerful picket at Heathrow, protesting the horrific virginity tests, which ...
Every day on the streets of the UK, in playgrounds, classrooms, shops, at work, on public transport, black and minority ethnic people are racially harassed. This can take any form, from a racist tweet ...
£3.00 The July issue of Race & Class takes up three topical themes: the monetarisation of private information, the politics of film and the demonisation of ‘anti-racism’.
£3.00 The October 2006 edition of the IRR journal Race & Class leads with Liz Fekete's critique of the 'enlightened fundamentalism' of anti-immigrant feminists, continues with Jonathan Scott's ...
£6.00 The October 2009 issue of the journal Race & Class is a festschrift dedicated to radical educationalist Chris Searle on his sixty-fifth birthday. £3.00 The July 2009 edition of the journal Race ...
£2.50 How Europe uses popular racism, criminalisation and specious ‘democracy’ to keep out refugees.
£3.00 Covid 19 has, asserts the July issue of Race & Class, thrown into relief so many key issues: the essential frailty of advanced capitalism, the potential for the state to control the life and ...
£3.00 Past oppressions are written into our statues, our architecture and our walls. This special issue of Race & Class brings a new perspective to reparatory history.