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Science & SocietyIndex
1.
Articles, Communications, Review Articles
Alphabetized by Author
Volume 51 through Volume 81
1987S2017
2
Abrahamian, Ervand. The 1963 Coup in Iran. (A)65:2(2001), 182S215
Adi, Hakim. The Communist Movement in West Africa. (C)61:1(1997), 94S99
Adi, Hakim. Forgotten Comrade? Desmond Buckle: An African Communist in Britain. (A)70:1(2006), 22S45
Adler, Irving. Some Philosophical Implications of Modern Mathematics. (A)51:2(1987),154S169
Adler, Irving. Equity, Law and Bartleby. (C)51:4(1987S88), 468S474
Adler, Irving. Mathematics and Philosophy: A Comment. (C)61:2(1997), 255S256
Ado, Anatoly. The Role of the French Revolution in the Transition from Feudalism toCapitalism. (C)54:3(1990), 361S366
Agnoletto, Stefano. Periodic Crises in Capitalism: Pathological or Restorative? (A)77:4(2013), 459S485
Alam, M. Shahid. Articulating Group Differences: A Variety of Autocentrisms. (C)67:2(2003), 205S217
Albert, Michael, and Robin Hahnel. Participatory Planning. (A)56:1(1992), 39S59
Albert, Michael, and Robin Hahnel. In Defense of Participatory Economics. (A)66:1(2002), 7S21
Albert, Michael, and Robin Hahnel. Reply [to Comments by Kotz and O’Neill]. (C)66:1(2002), 26S28
Albert, Michael, and Robin Hahnel. Comment [on Kotz]. (C)66:1(2002), 111S113
Albert, Michael, and Robin Hahnel. Comment [on O’Neill]. (C)66:1(2002), 154S156
Alcoff, José, and Linda Martín Alcoff. Autonomism in Theory and Practice. (A)79:2(2015), 221S242
Alcoff, Linda Martín, and José Alcoff. Autonomism in Theory and Practice. (A)79:2(2015), 221S242
Alcorn, John. Argument and Allocation: The Contention of Ajax and Ulysses for theArmor of Achilles. (A)58:2(1994), 163S174
3
Arruzza, Cinzia. Functionalist, Determinist, Reductionist: Social Reproduction Feminismand Its Critics. (A)80:1(2016), 9S30
Au, Wayne. Vygotsky and Lenin on Learning: The Parallel Structures of Individual andSocial Development. (A)71:3(2007), 273S298
Amin, Samir. Colonialism and the Rise of Capitalism: A Comment. (C)54:1(1990), 67S72
Anderson, Kevin. Lenin’s Encounter with Hegel After Eighty Years: A CriticalAssessment. (A)59:3(1995), 298S319
Anderson, Kevin B. A Recently Discovered Article by Erich Fromm on Trotsky and theRussian Revolution. (C)66:2(2002), 266S271
Anderson, W. H. Locke, and Frank W. Thompson. Neoclassical Marxism. (A)52:2(1988), 215S228
Andreyev, A., M. Jovchuk and M. Maslin. Soviet Philosophy Today: Perspectives andNew Directions. (C)51:3(1987), 339S346
Angotti, Thomas. The Stalin Period: Opening Up History. (A)52:1(1988), 5S34
Angotti, Thomas. The Housing Question: Progressive Agenda and Socialist Program. (RA)54:1(1990), 86S97
Antentas, Josep Maria. Daniel Bensaïd’s Joan of Arc. (A)79:1(2015), 63S89
Aptheker, Bettina. Black Women: Love, Labor, Sorrow, Struggle. (RA)51:4(1987S88),478S485
Aptheker, Bettina. Red Feminism: A Personal and Historical Reflection. (A)66:4(2002S2003), 519S526
Aptheker, Bettina. Fireweed: Fusion of the Personal and Political in an Extraordinary Life. (RA)70:3(2006), 411S417
Aptheker, Herbert. American Negro Slave Revolts: Fifty Years Gone. (C)51:1(1987),68S71
Aptheker, Herbert. Racism and Anti-Racism: A Reply. (C)57:1(1993), 79S80
Aptheker, Herbert. The Soviet Collapse and the Surrounding Capitalist World. (C)62:2(1998), 283S284
4
Aptheker, Herbert. The Last Days: Some Memories of the War. (C)66:2(2002), 263S266
Arena, John. Bringing in the Black Working Class: The Black Urban Regime Strategy. (A)75:2(2011), 153S179
Armstrong, Elisabeth. Contingency Plans for the Feminist Revolution. (A)65:1(2001),39S71
Arrighi, Giovanni. Global Capitalism and the Persistence of the NorthSSouth Divide. (C)65:4(2001S2002), 469S476
Arthur, Chris. Capital: A Note on Translation. (C)54:2(1990), 224S225
Arthur, Christopher J. Systematic Dialectic. (A)62:3(1998), 447S459
Arthur, Christopher J. The Young Engels and Philosophy. (C)62:4(1998S99), 579
Ash, Michael and Roberta Garner. Contemplating the Unusual and Unpredictable. (RA)74:2(2010), 248S258
Auerbach, Paul, and Peter Skott. Capitalist Trends and Socialist Priorities. (C)57:2(1993), 194S204
Azeri, Siyaves. Consciousness as Objective Activity: A HistoricalSGenetic Approach. (A)75:1(2011), 8S37
Bakan, Abigail B., and Daiva Stasiulis. Foreigh Domestic Worker Policy in Canada andthe Social Boundaries of Modern Citizenship. (A)58:1(1994), 7S33
Bakir, Ergodan, and Al Campbell. Neoliberalism, the Rate of Profit and the Rate ofAccumulation. (A)74:3(2010), 323S342
Balaban, Oded. The Positivistic Nature of the Critical Theory. (A)53:4(1989S90), 442S458
Baragar, Fletcher, and Robert Chernomas. Profits from Production and Profits fromExchange: Financialization, Household Debt and Profitability in 21st-Century Capitalism. (A)76:3(2012), 319S339
Barbalet, J. M. The “Labor Aristocracy” in Context. (A)51:2(1987), 133S153
Barbalet, J. M. Class and Rationality: Olson’s Critique of Marx. (A)55:4(1991S92),446S468
Barbalet, J. M. Class Action and Class Theory: Contra Culture, Pro Emotion.
5
(C)60:4(1996S97), 478S485
Barrett, Neil. A Bright Shining Star: The CPGB and Anti-Fascist Activism in the 1930s. (A)61:1(1997), 10S26
Barrow, Clyde W. The Marx Problem in Marxian State Theory. (A)64:1(2000), 87S118
Barrow, Clyde W. Plain Marxists, Sophisticated Marxists, and C. Wright Mills’ The PowerElite. (A)71:4(2007), 400S430
Basu, Deepankar. The Reserve Army of Labor in the Postwar U. S. Economy. (A)77:2(2013), 179S201
Batou, Jean. Accumulation by Dispossession and Anti-Capitalist Struggles: A LongHistorical Perspective. (A)79:1(2015), 11S37
Baxandall, Rosalyn. Precursors and Bridges: Was the CPUSA Unique? (A)66:4(2002S2003), 500S505
Becker, Marc. Mariátegui, the Comintern, and the Indigenous Question in Latin America. (A) 70:4(2006), 450S479
Bellofiore, Riccardo. Rereading the Grundrisse After Capital: Symposium. Introduction. (A)75:1(2011), 38S42
Bergmann, Theodor. Engels on Agriculture. (A)62:1(1998), 145S162
Berland, Oscar. The Emergence of the Communist Perspective on the “Negro Question”in America: 1919S1931 (Part One). (A)63:4(1999S2000), 411S432
Berland, Oscar. The Emergence of the Communist Perspective on the “Negro Question”in America: 1919S1931 (Part Two). (A)64:2(2000), 194S217
Berland, Oscar. Nasanov and the Comintern’s American Negro Program. (C)65:2(2001),226S228
Betances, Emelio. The Dominican Grassroots Movement and the Organized Left,1978S1986. (A)79:3(2015), 388S413
Bhandari, Rakesh. Grossman and Luxury Spending. (C)72:1(2008), 95S105
Bhattacharya, Ramkrishna. Two Quotations in Marx’s Capital Identified. (C)79:4(2015),610S613
6
Bichler, Shimson. Political Power Shifts in Israel, 1977 and 1992: Unsuccessful ElectoralEconomics or Long Range Realignment? (A)58:4(1994S95), 415S439
Bichler, Shimson, and Jonathan Nitzan. Inflation and Accumulation: The Case of Israel. (A)64:3(2000), 274S309
Bichler, Shimson, and Jonathan Nitzan. Inflation and Accumulation: Correction. (C)65:3(2001), 383S385
Bichler, Shimson, and Jonathan Nitzan. The Rockefeller Boys. (C)71:2(2007), 243S249
Bidney, Martin. Neo-Blakean Vision in the Verse of Historian E. P. Thompson: The“Abstraction” of Labor and Cultural Capital. (A)68:4(2004S05), 396S420
Bitsakis, Eftichios. For an Evolutionary Epistemology. (A)51:4(1987S88), 389S413
Bitsakis, Eftichios. Scientific Realism. (A)57:1(1993), 160S193
Bitsakis, Eftichios. The “Stalinist” Tradition in Dialectics. (C)63:2(1999), 242
Bitsakis, Eftichios. Forms of Physical Determination. (A)66:2(2002), 228S255
Blackledge, Paul. Karl Kautsky and Marxist Historiography. (A)70:3(2006), 337S359
Blackledge, Paul. History, Ethics and Politics. (C)73:1(2009), 77S84
Blank, Gary. Rethinking the “Other Transition”: Towards an Alternative MarxistExplanation. (A)77:2(2013), 153S178
Blaut, J. M. Colonialism and the Rise of Capitalism. (A)53:3(1989), 260S296
Blaut, J. M. Evaluating Imperialism. (C)61:3(1997), 382S393
Blue, Gregory. Joseph Needham, Heterodox Marxism and the Social Background toChinese Science. (A)62:2(1998), 195S217
Boer, Roland. Lenin on Tolstoy: Between Imaginary Resolution and RevolutionaryChristian Communism. (A)78:1(2014), 41S60
Boger, George. On the Materialist Appropriation of Hegel’s Dialectical Method. (A)55:1(1991), 26S59
Bonefeld, Werner. Primitive Accumulation and Capitalist Accumulation: Notes on SocialConstitution and Expropriation. (A)75:3(2011), 379S399
7
Boucher, Douglas H. Not with a Bang but a Whimper. (A)60:3(1996), 279S289
Bowles, Paul, and Tony Stone. China’s Reforms: A Study in the Application of HistoricalMaterialism. (A)55:3(1991), 261S290
Bozkurt, Umut. Neoliberalism with a Human Face: Making Sense of the Justice andDevelopment Party’s Neoliberal Populism in Turkey. (A)77:3(2013), 372S396
Braa, Dean M. The Great Potato Famine and the Transformation of Irish Peasant Society. (A)61:2(1997), 193S215
Brass, Tom. Modern Capitalism and Unfree Labor: The Unsaying of Marxism. 78:3(A),288S311
Brass, Tom. Who These Days is Not a Subaltern? The Populist Drift of Global LaborHistory. (A)80:1(2017), 10S34
Brass, Tom. Class Struggle and Unfree Labor: The (Marxist) Road Not Taken. (A)81:2(2017), 197S219
Brass, Tom. Festina Lente? (A)81:3(2017), 403S409
Brentlinger, John. Revolutionizing Spirituality: Reflections on Marxism and Religion. (A)64:2(2000), 171S193
Bridenthal, Renate, and David Laibman. Introduction [to Special Issue, “The DeepStructure of the Present Moment”]. (A)69:3(2005), 278S283
Bridenthal, Renate, John P. Pittman, and Shana A. Russell. The Russian Revolution:One Century Later. Special Issue. 81:4(2017)
Broadhead, Lee-Anne, and Sean Howard. Nanotechnology and the Developing Critiqueof Scientism. (C)74:4(2010), 553S562
Brodkin, Karen. Race and Gender in the Construction of Class. (C)60:4(1996S97),471S477
Browne, Paul. Lukács’ Later Ontology. (A)54:2(1990), 193S218
Browne, Paul Leduc. Disposable Time, Freedom, and Care. (A)75:3(2011), 297S324
Bryan, Dick. International Accumulation and the Contradictions of National MonetaryPolicy. (A)56:3(1992), 324S352
8
Buey, Francisco Fernandez, and Carles Muntaner. Marxisms Against the Current:Weighing the Decade of the Eighties. (C)58:4(1994S95), 471S481
Buhle, Paul. Rethinking C. L. R. James. (RA)60:2(1996), 220S226
Buhle, Paul. Contradictions of the Intellectuals. (RA)65:1(2001), 136S144
Buhle, Paul. The Left in American Comics: Rethinking the Visual Vernacular. (RA)71:3(2007), 348S356
Bulavka, Lyudmila, and Aleksandr Buzgalin. The Oligarchy, the State and theIntelligentsia: Khodorkovsky as a Mirror of the Counter-Points of Post-Soviet Russia. (C)80:2(2016), 248S256
Burbach, Roger, and William I. Robinson. The Fin de Siecle Debate: Globalization asEpochal Shift. (A)63:1(1999), 10S39
Burkett, Paul. Value, Capital and Nature: Some Ecological Implications of Marx’s Critiqueof Political Economy. (A)60:3(1996), 332S359
Burkett, Paul. Nature and Value Theory: Airing Out the Issues. (C)67:4(2003S04),452S462
Burns, Peter, S.J. Socialism, Social Democracy, and Markets. (C)59:2(1995), 193S197
Burns, Tony. Joseph Dietzgen and the History of Marxism. (A)66:2(2002), 202S227
Buzgalin, Aleksandr. The October Revolution: Practice as the Impulse for theDevelopment of Theory. (A)81:4(2017), 501S514
Buzgalin, Aleksandr, and Andrey Kolganov. Economic Crisis: Scenarios of Post-CrisisDevelopment. (C)74:4(2010), 538S546
Buzgalin, Aleksandr, and Andrey Kolganov. Ukraine: Who Is to Blame, and WhatNeeds to Be Done? (RA)81:2(2017), 287S296
Buzgalin, Aleksandr V., and Andrey I. Kolganov. The Anatomy of Twenty-First CenturyExploitation: From Traditional Extraction of Surplus Value to Exploitation of CreativeActivity. (A)77:4(2013), 486S511
Buzgalin, Aleksandr, and Lyudmila Bulavka. The Oligarchy, the State and theIntelligentsia: Khodorkovsky as a Mirror of the Counter-Points of Post-Soviet Russia. (C)80:2(2016), 248S256
9
Byron, Chris. A Critique of Sean Sayers’ Marxian Theory of Human Nature. (C)78:2(2014), 241S248
Byron, Chris. Essence and Alienation: Marx’s Theory of Human Nature. (A)80:3(2016),375S394
Cahan, Jean Axelrad. The Concept of Property in Marx’s Theory of History: A Defenseof the Autonomy of the Socioeconomic Base. (A)58:4(1994S95), 392S414
Callaghan, John. Colonies, Racism, the CPGB and the Comintern in the Inter-War Years. (C)61:4(1997S98), 513S525
Caligaris, Gastón, and Guido Starosta. The Commodity Nature of Labor-Power. (A)80:3(2016), 319S345
Callinicos, Alex. G. A. Cohen and the Critique of Political Economy. (A)70:2(2006),252S274
Callinicos, Alex, and Eduardo da Motta e Albuquerque. Introduction [to Special Issue:“Crises and Transformation of Capitalism: Marx’s Investigations and ContemporaryAnalysis”]. 80:4(2016), 444S453
Callinicos, Alex, and Joseph Choonara. How Not to Write About the Rate of Profit: ACritique of David Harvey. (A)80:4(2016), 481S494
Camfield, David. Re-Orienting Class Analysis: Working Classes as Historical Formations. (A)68:4(2004S05), 421S446
Campbell, Al. Democratic Planned Socialism: Feasible Economic Procedures. (A)66:1(2002), 29S42
Campbell, Al. Reply [to Cottrell & Cockshott and Campbell]. (C)66:1(2002), 47S49
Campbell, Al. Comment [on Laibman]. (C)66:1(2002), 130S132
Campbell, Al. Comment [on O’Neill]. (C)66:1(2002), 152S154
Campbell, Al. Cuba: Realities and Debates. (RA)67:2(2003), 226S230
Campbell, Al, and Ergodan Bakir. Neoliberalism, the Rate of Profit and the Rate ofAccumulation. (A)74:3(2010), 323S342
Campbell, Al. Guest Editor. Special Issue, “Designing Socialism: Visions, Projections,Models.” 76:2(2012)
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Campbell, Al. “Introduction” [to Special Issue, “Designing Socialism: Visions, Projections,Models”]. 76:2(2012), 140S146
Campbell, Susan. “Black Bolsheviks” and Recognition of African-America’s Right toSelf-Determination by the Communist Party USA. (A)58:4(1994S95), 440S470
Cannistraro, Philip V. Who Was Angelica Balabanoff’s “Maria”? A Note on HistoricalIdentification. (C)67:3(2003), 349S352
Carchedi, Guglielmo. On Temporality, Simultaneity and TSS: A Reply to Laibman. (C)65:4(2001S2002), 509S515
Carchedi, Guglielmo. Tsakalotos on Homo Economicus: Some Comments. (C)70:3(2006), 370S375
Carchedi, Guglielmo. Dialectics and Temporality in Marx’s Mathematical Manuscripts. (C)72:4(2008), 415S426
Carchedi, Guglielmo. Mathematics and Dialectics in Marx: A Reply. (C)76:4(2012),546S549
Carchedi, Guglielmo. Was the Great Recession a Crisis of Profitability? (A)80:4(2016),495S514
Carling, Alan. Classes and Choices. (RA)51:2(1987), 200S206
Carling, Alan. Analytical Marxism and Historical Materialism: The Debate on SocialEvolution. (A)57:1(1993), 31S65
Carling, Alan. The Strength of Historical Materialism: A Comment. (C)58:1(1994), 60S72
Carling, Alan. Marxism Today: What Can We Learn from Yesterday? (RA)63:1(1999),89S97
Carling, Alan. The PrincipalSAgent Problem for Egalitarians: Bowles, Gintis and TheirCritics. (RA)66:3(2002), 408S416
Carling, Alan. Karl Marx’s Theory of History and the Recovery of the Marxian Tradition. (A)70:2(2006), 275S297
Carling, Alan. Problems of the Deep: Intention and History. (C)73:1(2009), 97S109
Carling, Alan, and Paul Wetherly. Introduction [to Special Issue, “Rethinking Marx andHistory”]. (A)70:2(2006), 146S153
11
Carr, Barry. Crisis in Mexican Communism: The Extraordinary Congress of the MexicanCommunist Party (Part 2). (A)51:1(1987), 43S67
Carroll, Peter. The Myth of the Moscow Archives. (A)68:3(2004), 337S341
Castañeda, Jorge. Realism for Latin America: Finding and Achieving the Possible. (A)69:2(2005), 138S142
Ceplair, Larry. The Base and Superstructure Debate in the Hollywood Communist Party. (A)72:3(2008), 319S348
Chandavarkar, Rajnarayan. From Communism to “Social Democracy”: The Rise andResilience of Communist Parties in India, 1920S1995. (C)61:1(1997), 99S106
Chattopadhyay, Paresh. Value and Exploitation: Marx’s Problem and Skillman’s Solution. (A)62:2(1998), 218S240
Chattopadhyay, Paresh. On the Question of Soviet Socialism. (A)75:1(2011), 107S114
Chernomas, Robert, and Fletcher Baragar. Profits from Production and Profits fromExchange: Financialization, Household Debt and Profitability in 21st-Century Capitalism. (A)76:3(2012), 319S339
Cherry, Robert. Race and Gender Aspects of Marxian Macromodels: The Case of theSocial Structure of Accumulation School, 1948S68. (A)55:1(1991), 60S78
Cherry, Robert. Holocaust Historiography: The Role of the Cold War. (A)63:4(1999S2000), 459S477
Chizuka, Tadami, and Michio Shibata. Marxist Studies of the French Revolution inJapan. (C)54:3(1990), 366S374
Choi, Wai Kit. Toward a Communist Immanent Critique: Maoism, the Frankfurt School,and Angelus Novus. (C)73:2(2009), 208S216
Choi, Wai Kit. Revolutionary Shanghai: Rethinking Class and the Politics of DifferenceThrough Chinese Communism. (A)73:2(2009), 242S260
Choonara, Joseph, and Alex Callinicos. How Not to Write About the Rate of Profit: ACritique of David Harvey. (A)80:4(2016), 481S494
Christian, David. Accumulation and Accumulators: The Metaphor Marx Muffed. (C)54:2(1990), 219S224
12
Clarke, Simon. The Marxist Theory of Overaccumulation and Crisis. (A)54:4(1990S91),442S467
Clay, John. The Deep Difference Between Labor and Use-Value: Comment. (C)70:3(2006), 375S378
Clow, Michael. Solar Energy is No Panacea for Ecological Limits on Economic Activity. (C)62:2(1998), 266S276
Cockshott, W. Paul, and Allin F. Cottrell. Value, Markets and Socialism. (A)61:3(1997),330S357
Cockshott, Paul, and Allin Cottrell. Comment [on Campbell]. (C)66:1(2002), 43S44
Cockshott, Paul, and Allin Cottrell. The Relation Between Economic and PoliticalInstances in the Communist Mode of Production. (A)66:1(2002), 50S64
Cockshott, Paul, and Allin Cottrell. Reply [to Comments by Devine and Laibman]. (C)66:1(2002), 70S71
Cockshott, Paul, and Allin Cottrell. Comment [on Kotz]. (C)66:1(2002), 109S110
Cockshott, Paul, and Dave Zachariah. Hunting Productive Work. (A)70:4(2006),509S527
Cockshott, Paul, and Dave Zachariah. Credit Crunch: Origins and Orientation.(A)74:3(2010), 343S361
Cockshott, Paul, and Allin Cottrell. Answers to five questions, distributed throughoutSpecial Issue, “Designing Socialism.” 76:2(2012), 147S261
Colodny, Robert G. The Problem of the Ruling Class in Marxist Theory: A Comment. (C)51:1(1987), 93S96
Colodny, Robert G. The U. S. Political Culture of the 1930s and the American Responseto the Spanish Civil War. (A)53:1(1989), 47S61
Concheiro, Elvira. A Century After His Death: Friedrich Engels and the Concept ofPolitical Parties. (A)62:1(1998), 163S180
Cook, Blance Weisen. The Impact of Anti-Communism in American Life. (C)53:4(1989S90), 470S475
Costa Ribeiro, Leonardo, and Eduardo da Motta e Albuquerque. Countertendencies
13
at Work: New Sectors and New Regions in the Current Transition Towards a New Phaseof Capitalism. (A)80:4(2016), 566S580
Cottrell, Allin F., and W. Paul Cockshott. Value, Markets and Socialism. (A)61:3(1997),330S357
Cottrell, Allin, and Paul Cockshott. Comment [on Campbell]. (C)66:1(2002), 43S44
Cottrell, Allin, and Paul Cockshott. The Relation Between Economic and PoliticalInstances in the Communist Mode of Production. (A)66:1(2002), 50S64
Cottrell, Allin, and Paul Cockshott. Reply [to Comments by Devine and Laibman]. (C)66:1(2002), 70S71
Cottrell, Allin, and Paul Cockshott. Comment [on Kotz]. (C)66:1(2002), 109S110
Cottrell, Allin, and Paul Cockshott. Answers to five questions, distributed throughoutSpecial Issue, “Designing Socialism.” (A)76:2(2012), 147S261
Cross, Richard, and Andrew Flinn. Introduction [to Special Issue, “Biography MeetsHistory: Communist Party Lives in International Perspective”]. (A)70:1(2006), 11S21
Cunningham, Frank. Retrieving Macpherson: Critical Appraisal of a New Study. (RA)67:2(2003), 236S244
Dale, Russell. Guglielmo Carchedi on Marx, Calculus, Time, and Dialectics. (C)75:4(2011), 555S566
Dale, Russell, and Justin P. Holt. Introduction [to Special Issue: “SocializingPhilosophy”]. 80(1), 4S8
da Motta e Albuquerque, Eduardo, and Alex Callinicos. Introduction [to Special Issue:“Crises and Transformation of Capitalism: Marx’s Investigations and ContemporaryAnalysis”]. 80:4(2016), 444S453
da Motta e Albuquerque, Eduardo, and Leonardo Costa Ribeiro. Countertendenciesat Work: New Sectors and New Regions in the Current Transition Towards a New Phaseof Capitalism. (A)80:4(2016), 566S580
Da Silva, Ednaldo Araquem. Wage-Profit Tradeoffs in Brazil: An Input/Output Analysis,1970S1975. (C)51:3(1987), 347S354
Das, Raju J. State Theories: A Critical Analysis. (A)60:1(1996), 27S57
14
Das, Raju J. Politicism and Idealism in State Theory. (RA)63:1(1999), 97S104
Davidson, Neil. Marx and Engels on the Scottish Highlands. (A)65:3(2001), 286S326
Davis, Ann E. Marx and the Mixed Economy: Money, Accumulation, and the Role of theState. (A)74:3(2010), 409S428
Dawson, Michael, and John Bellamy Foster. Is There an Allocation Problem?:Accounting for Unproductive Labor.(C)58:3(1994), 315S325
Day, Richard B., and Daniel Gaido. Permanent Revolution SS But Without Socialism? (C)77:3(2013), 397S404
Deane, Hugh. Mao: A Lamentation. (C)59:1(1995), 69S81
Deep History: A Symposium on David Laibman’s Deep History: A Study in Social Evolutionand Human Potential. 73:1(2009), 77S143
Del Puppo, Dario. Il Quarto Stato. (A)58:2(1994), 136S162
Delany, Sheila. Two Studies of Marriage. (RA)51:2(1987), 206S210
Delany, Sheila. Marxist Medievalism: A Tradition. (C)68:2(2004), 206S215
Dennis, Michael. The Other Good Fight: Hollywood Talent and the Working-ClassMovement of the 1930s. (A)80:2(2016), 170S195
Deschacht, Nick. The Economics of Happiness: The Conservative Current in GreenEconomic Thought. (RA)77:4(2013), 569S575
De Smet, Brecht. Revolution and Counter-Revolution in Egypt. (A)78:1(2014), 11S40
Devinatz, Victor G. A Reevaluation of the Trade Union Unity League, 1929S1934. (A)71:1(2007), 33S58
Devinatz, Victor G. A Cold War at International Harvester: The Schachtmanites and theFarm Equipment Workers Union’s Demise, 1946S1955. (A)72:2(2008), 182S207
Devinatz, Victor G. The United Auto Workers Union as American Vanguard, 1935 to1970: Reality or Illusion? (RA)73:3(2009), 403S410
Devinatz, Victor G. Union Solidarity, Collective Struggle and the Caterpillar LaborDispute, 1991S1998. (C)74:4(2010), 546S553
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Devinatz, Victor G. Struggling Against U. S. Labor’s Decline Under Late Capitalism:Lessons for the Early 21st Century. (RA)76:3(2012), 393S405
Devinatz, Victor G. A Cold War Thaw in the International Working Class Movement? TheWorld Federation of Trade Unions and the International Confederation of Free TradeUnions, 1967S1977. (A)77:3(2013), 342S371
Devine, James N. Sherman on Crises: A Comment. (C)54:1(1990), 81S85
Devine, Pat. Introduction [to Special Issue, “Building Socialism Theoretically: Alternativesto Capitalism and the Invisible Hand”]. (A)66:1(2002), 5S6
Devine, Pat. Comment [on Campbell]. (C)66:1(2002), 45S47
Devine, Pat. Comment [on Cockshott and Cottrell]. (C)66:1(2002), 65S67
Devine, Pat. Participatory Planning Through Negotiated Coordination. (A)66:1(2002),72S85
Devine, Pat. Reply [to Laibman and O’Neill]. (C)66:1(2002), 91S93
Devine, Pat. Answers to five questions, distributed throughout Special Issue, “DesigningSocialism.” (A)76:2(2012), 147S261
Diesing, Paul. Comments on Rosenthal’s “The Escape from Hegel.” (C)64:3(2000),374S378
Ding, Xiaoqin. The Socialist Market Economy: China and the World. (C)73:2(2009),235S241
Ding, Xiaoqin, Peihua Mao, and Xing Yin. Answers to five questions, distributedthroughout Special Issue, “Designing Socialism.” (A)76:2(2012), 147S261
Ding, Xiaoqin, and Pinyue Lu. A Dual-Level Theory of the Creation of Labor Value. (A)81:1(2017), 54S72
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DiSalvo, Jackie. Occupy Wall Street: Creating a Strategy for a Spontaneous Movement. (A)79:2(2015), 264S287
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Dolek, Caglar. Privatization of Security as a State-Led and Class-Driven Process: TheCase of Turkey. (A)79:3(2015), 414S441
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Duchesne, Ricardo. Eurocentrism and Historical Variety. (RA)67:1(2003), 100S104
Duchesne, Ricardo. The Post-Malthusian World Began in Western Europe in theEighteenth Century: A Reply to Goldstone and Wong. (C)67:2(2003), 195S205
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Editorial Perspectives
17
Marxism in a Punctuation. 58:1(1994), 1S5 Socialism: Dead Again, Born Again. 58:2(1994), 130S135Of Praise and Grafitti. 58:3(1994), 258S263Against Despair. 58:4(1994-1995), 386S391Inspirational Normal Science. 59:1(1995), 2S8After Marxism? 59:2(1995), 130S136Creative Tensions. 59:4(1995S1996), 466S469Science & Society at 60. 60:1(1996), 2S6Endangered Species, Endangered System. 60:2(1996), 130S136Our Interface with Nature. 60:3(1996), 258S260Science and Its Cultural Critics; or, Hermeneutical Gravity and Quantum Levity.
60:4(1996S1997), 386S392Of Mice and Marxism. 61:1(1997), 2S6In Defense of Economics. 61:2(1997), 154S160One Immodest Vision and Two Modest Proposals. 61:3(1997), 298S302’Twixt Creationism and Reductionism. 61:4(1997S1998), 442S448A Centennial and a Sesquicentennial. 62:1(1998), 2S3The Joys and Perils of Marking Time. 62:2(1998), 183S190The Enigma and Ubiquity of Change. 62:3(1998), 331S332The Manifesto: Celebration Vs. Rededication. 62:4(1998S1999), 507S512Global Turbulence and Capitalist Crisis. 63:1(1999), 3S9Forecasts of the Coming Century. 63:2(1999), 137S144What’s in a Name? 63:3(1999), 277S282The Deep American Roots of “TINA.” 63:4(1999S2000), 403S410Conditional Inevitability. 64:1(2000), 3S10The Spirit of the (Now Departed) Millennium. 64:2(2000), 143S150Scienceandsociety.com. 64:3(2000), 265S268, 271S273The Need to Be Truly Radical. 64:4(2000S2001), 391S398An Intense and Many-Textured Moment. 65:1(2001), 3S4Blink of an Eye. 65:2(2001), 149S156Of People, Curves, and Autism. 65:3(2001), 277S285Anarchism, Marxism, and the Cunning of Capitalism. 65:4 (2001S2002), 421S427Future Visions. 66:1(2002), 3S4Radhika’s Cats. 66:2(2002), 161S168The United States’ Mixed Economy. 66:3(2002), 303S310The Legacy of the Eighteenth Brumaire. 66:4(2002S2003), 441S447Apropos the Front Matter to Capital, Vol. I. 67:1(2003), 1S8Food, Social Evolution, and Conquest. 67:2(2003), 127S135Moribund Capitalism and the Cannibalization of Public Space. 67:3(2003), 267S275Chile: Triumph and Despair SS Reflections After Three Decades. 67:4(2003S04),
391S398The Present as Theory. 68:1(2004), 3S9Value Theory and the Academic Respectability Barrier. 68:2(2004), 129S136Spain: The Legacy, the Challenge. 68:3(2004), 261S262Snow Ploughs, Cookies, and the Formation of Ideologized Consciousness.
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68:4(2004S05), 389S395The Two-Way Challenge. 69:1(2005), 3S4A Small Transition. 69:2(2005), 135S136Getting to the Roots. 69:3(2005), 277Social Security. 69:4(2005), 521S528Red Butterflies Flap Their Wings: A Parallel Twentieth Century. 70:1(2006),
3S10Once More on the Arrows, Cycles, and Cunning of History. 70:2(2006), 145Flea Markets. 70:3(2006), 301S307A Tiny Red Butterfly Wing Flap. 70:4(2006), 443S449Transitions. 71:1(2007), 3S6Privatization, Rational Choice, Human Agency, and Prospect Park.
71:2(2007), 139S145The Passionate Political Economy of the Minimum Wage. 71:3(2007),
267S272On Being in a Hurry. 71:4(2007), 393S399Marxism, Socialism, China and the World. 72:1(2008), 3S10What If? The Pleasures and Perils of Counterfactual History. 72:2(2008),
131S135, 142S146Integrated with the Enemy. 72:3(2008), 259S265Year Naming, Millennial Transitions, and English: A Trivial Observation, and
Prediction. 72:4(2008), 383S388Globalization, Deep History, and A Victory Celebration. 73:1(2009), 3S5China: Realities at the Crossroads, Perspectives in Contention. 73:2(2009),
163S164John McKay Cammett, July 8, 1927SJuly 30, 2008, by Frank Rosengarten.
73:2(2009), 164S166The Onset of Great Depression II: Conceptualizing the Crisis. 73:3(2009), 299S308Art, Science and Globalization. 73:4(2009), 445S451Why Marxism? Approaching an Old Question from a New Standpoint.
74:1(2010), 3S11“Explaining” the Crisis: Shoals O’ Red Herrings. 74:2(2010), 149S156Economic Crisis, Logorrheia, and the Enduring Marxist Vision. 74:3(2010),
285Once Again on Reform, Revolution and Socialism. 74:4(2010), 453S460A Reflection on Secularism, Elitism and Epistemology. 75:1(2011), 3S7There Is a Revolutionary Alternative (TIARA). 75:2(2011), 145S152Science & Society at 75. 75:3(2011), 289S296Afghanistan: The Deep Structure of a Complex and Adverse Moment. 75:4(2011),
447S453An Embrace Across the Generations, as We Begin Our Fourth
Quarter Century. 76:1(2012), 3S9The Socialism Discussion Widens SS and This is Just the Beginning! 76:2(2012),
139Whither the Occupy Movement: Models and Proposals. 76:3(2012), 283S290
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The Recurring Temptations of Anti-Equilibrium. 76:4(2012), 425S432On the Self-Interest of the Capitalist Ruling Class. 77:1(2013), 3S9The HumanSNature Interface: Navigating Between Utopic and Dystopic
Determinisms. 77:2(2013), 145S152Bits and Pieces: Revolution, Quotology, Poverty and Robots. 77:3(2013), 285S293On the 130th Anniversary of the Death of Karl Marx: Answers to Questions from
China’s People’s Daily. 77:4(2013), 451S458Political Economy and Electoral Politics: Some Exploratory Questions. 78:1(2014),
3S10The Word that Dared not Speak Its Name. 78:2(2014), 145, 150S152Value, Exploitation and Anti-Racism: Can the New Communism Learn Something
from the Old? Barbara Foley, guest editorialist. 78:2(2014), 145S150Quotology, Stages, and the Posthumous Anarchization of Marx. 78:3(2014),
281S287On the Importance of Revisiting Fundamentals. 78:4(2014), 419S425Capitalism, Inequality, and Piketty. Julio Huato, guest editorialist. 79:1(2015), 3S10Anarchism, and the Continuing Importance of Critique by Way of Recuperation.
79:2(2015), 147Envisioning Capitalism: The Hegemonic Power of Ideas. 79:3(2015), 329S335Greece, Europe, and the Capitalist Financial Oligarchy. 79:4(2015), 489S496Philosophical Foundations, and Another Marxist Publishing Milestone. 80:1(2016),
3Central Planning: Vindication By Way of a Simple Thought Experiment. 80:2(2016),
141S146Many, Many Ways to Talk About Socialism. 80:3(2016), 283S290Marxism and Capitalist Crises. 80:4(2016), 443Value, Stock Market Crises, and the Fevered Imaginings of Two 17-Year-Olds.
81:1(2017), 3S9Immiseration, Empowerment and Revolution: Rethinking Capitalist Crisis.
81:2(2017), 163S171Syriza: The Left in Government, When “Government” and Power Diverge.
81:3(2017), 323S330Rethinking and Redeploying the Moment of October 1917. 81:4(2017), 467Marvin E. Gettleman, 1933S2017. Remembrances by Sandi Cooper, Stuart
Schaar, Renate Bridenthal, and Blanche Cook. 81:4(2017),468S472
Ehrbar, Hans. The Ruling Class Without Conceptual Preliminaries: A Reply to JohnHoffman. (C)52:1(1988), 93S102
Ehrenberg, John. Class Politics and the State: Lenin and the Contradictions of Socialism. (A)59:3(1995), 437S463
Eisenstein, Hester. Raising Consciousness, Eyebrows and Hell. (RA) 65:1(2001),145S147
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Eisenstein, Hester. A Dangerous Liaison? Feminism and Corporate Globalization. (A)69:3(2005), 487S518
Eldred, Michael. The Unreflected Historicity of Historical Materialism. (C)51:4(1987S88),475S477
Eley, Geoff. From Cultures of Militancy to the Politics of Culture: Writing the History ofBritish Communism. (C)61:1(1997), 119S131
Elich, Gregory. The Arrogance of the Imperial Mind. (RA)67:2(2003), 231S236
Ellner, Steve. Leftist Goals and the Debate over Anti-Neoliberal Strategy in Latin America. (A)68:1 (2004), 10S32
Ellner, Steve. Revolutionary and Non-Revolutionary Paths of Radical Populism: Directionsof the Chavista Movement in Venezuela. (A)69:2(2005), 160S190
Ellner, Steve. The Defensive Strategy on the Left in Latin America: Objective andSubjective Conditions in the Age of Globalization. (C)70:3(2006), 397S410
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Ellner, Steve. The Rightward Drift of a Latin American Social Democrat. (RA)75:3(2011),419S428
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Ellner, Steve. David Laibman’s Synthesis Approach to Long-Standing Issues of MarxistDebate. (A)81:3(2017), 397S403
Engel-Di Mauro, Salvatore. Materialist Dialectics and Biophysical Worlds. (A)81:3(2017),375S 396
Ercan, Fuat, and Sebnem Oguz. Rethinking Anti-Neoliberal Strategies Through thePerspective of Value Theory: Insights from the Turkish Case. (A)71:2(2007), 173S202
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Flinn, Andrew, and Richard Cross. Introduction [to Special Issue, “Biography MeetsHistory: Communist Party Lives in International Perspective”]. (A)70:1(2006), 11S21
Floyd, Kevin. Closing the (Heterosexual) Frontier: Midnight Cowboy as National Allegory. (A)65:1(2001), 99S130
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Gimenez, Martha E. Capitalism and the Oppression of Women: Marx Revisited. (A)69:1(2005), 11S32
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