November 2020

Essays
Seguridad alimentaria y la pandemia en Cuba: lanzamiento de “Trabajo de Amor”
Sarah Stephens, Justine Williams, Mariakarla Nodarse

Essays
Forgotten ‘Heroes’: Frontline Nurses’ Experiences of the Covid-19 Crisis
Radha Adhikari, Sushila Karki-Budhathoki, Kate Weir
The government’s appropriation of health professionals as ‘NHS Heroes’ has been mainly a way of keeping the issue of economic and social justice at bay, without making any meaningful political commitment to improve workers’ long-term wellbeing.

Essays
Cuidar en tiempos de crisis: ¿Quién es responsable?
Sarah Stephens, Justine Williams, Mariakarla Nodarse

Essays
Everyday Re-enchantments: Plants and the Labour of Care in the Time of Covid-19
Gavin Maclean

Essays
Food Security and the Pandemic in Cuba: Film Release of “Trabajo de Amor”
Sarah Stephens, Justine Williams and Mariakarla Nodarse

Essays
Nanny Solidarity Now: The Nanny Regulation Movement as Racialized Class War
Veronica Deutsch
The regulation movement is led entirely by white British women, yet migrant workers make up at least 47% of the sector. These groups benefit from implicitly racist and classist structures by centering themselves as the “qualified” option.