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Vol. 22 No. 4April 2011
Special Report
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Wal-Mart -- It's Alive!
If Wal-Mart is a person, as the Supreme Court contends, it's a behemoth terrorizing the countryside. But when it comes to workers' rights, it remains curiously immune from lawsuits. -
Fighting Back
What the unions have learned—and what they may still need to learn—about fighting Wal-Mart's expansion -
Wal-Mart’s China Connections
From production to retailing, Wal-Mart’s China operations display a dystopian collaboration between low-wage employer and autocratic state. -
Wal-Mart Tries to Go to Town
America’s mega-retailer can’t boost profits unless it gains entry to America’s largest cities. Against stiff resistance, it’s still trying. -
Which Path for Europe?
Wal-Mart couldn’t cut it in Germany. But while neighboring Scandinavia still pays retail workers well, the low-wage model is making inroads into other European countries. -
How Wal-Mart Shapes the World
Will the economy follow Wal-Mart’s race to the bottom—or will social counterweights and other business models demonstrate a better way? -
The Greening of Wal-Mart
Wal-Mart’s new green-washed image is deflecting attention from the drag the company continues to inflict on workers’ wages and communities’ quality of life.
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Vol. 23 No. 3April 2012
Special Report
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The Myth of the Level Playing Field
The boast that American workers are naturally superior to other workers and would therefore “win” in any fair competition is problematic at best and at worst, a pander to our national delusion of exceptionalism. -
Not a Great Deal for Asia
The Trans-Pacific Partnership could end up hurting the broader economic interests of both the U.S. and smaller Asian nations. -
The Pacific Pivot
America needs to try something new when it comes to international trade. -
A Stealth Attack on Democratic Governance
Why are Obama trade negotiators pushing the extreme Trans-Pacific Partnership, and why is it being negotiated in such an untransparent manner?
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Vol. 23 No. 2March 2012
Special Report
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The Cost of Financial Favoritism
If Republicans and Democrats can't find common ground on giving assistance to small banks and Community Development Financial Institutions, they aren't liable to agree on anything. -
Freelance Nation
Progressives need to make government work better by helping out entrepreneurs and the self-employed. -
The Credit Drought
It's hard for small businesses to get a leg up in this sluggish economy. -
Too Small to Bail?
An interview with Sheila Bair. -
The Destruction of Black Wealth
Businesses owned by African Americans are suffering at higher rates than most during the downturn. -
Capital Ideas Online
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Vol. 1 No. 23February 2012
Special Report
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Citizen Bopp
Meet the lawyer on a crusade to topple all limits on the role of money in politics. -
Toppling the Money Empire
Grassroots movements can lead the way in taking big money out of politics. -
Calling for a Convention
Amending the Constitution is our best bet for fixing Congress. -
Minimizing Special-Interest Power by Maximizing Participation
Fighting back against restrictive voting-rights laws and empowering small donors can help reclaim elections. -
Tocqueville for Toffs
Common people have to reclaim democratic civic society from moneyed interests. -
The Clean-Election State
Connecticut's fight against corruption creates a model of transparent government.
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Vol. 22 No. 10December 2011
Special Report
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Back from China?
Manufacturing once gave the U.S. its middle-class majority. Can it do it again? -
The Cost of Free Trade
Every president asserts that the next trade treaty will turn America into an export powerhouse, but that's just not true.
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