Jacobin Radio

Jacobin
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Apr 1, 2026 • 48min

Confronting Capitalism: This Century’s Biggest Labor Battle

Benjamin Fong, Associate Director at ASU’s Center for Work and Democracy and labor/logistics researcher. He explores why Amazon’s scale makes it a central target, how logistics dominance reshapes organizing, the roles of automation, AI surveillance, and delivery nodes, and why new networked strategies are needed to rebuild union power.
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4 snips
Mar 30, 2026 • 53min

Behind the News: Complications of the Iran War w/ Mouin Rabbani

Helen Yaffe, Professor of Latin American political economy and Cuba expert, discusses U.S. oil blockade impacts and Cuban resilience. Mouin Rabbani, Middle East analyst and Jadaliyya co-editor, examines the Iran war, regional politics, and negotiation dynamics. They cover sanctions, military strategy, Gulf state dilemmas, Cuban energy crises, and international responses in concise, sharp conversations.
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Mar 28, 2026 • 2h 50min

The Dig: Economic Warfare w/ Aslı Bâli, Esfandyar Batmanghelidj, Nicholas Mulder

Nicholas Mulder, economic historian of sanctions; Esfandyar Batmanghelidj, policy expert on Gulf economics; and Aslı Bâli, international law scholar. They probe economic warfare around the US‑Israeli conflict with Iran. They trace sanctions historically, analyze choke points like Hormuz, discuss asymmetric tactics, countermeasures such as de‑dollarization, and the geopolitical and humanitarian fallout.
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Mar 27, 2026 • 60min

Long Reads: El Salvador’s Jailer in Chief

Hilary Goodfriend, a UNAM postdoctoral researcher who writes on Salvadoran politics, unpacks Nayib Bukele’s rise. She discusses mass arrests and the state of exception. She explores Bukele’s economic plans like Bitcoin City and prison labor. She connects US ties, deportations, and regional hard-right trends.
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15 snips
Mar 24, 2026 • 53min

Behind the News: Beyond Debates of Class vs. Identity w/ Nancy Fraser

Nancy Fraser, feminist philosopher and critical theorist, outlines the three faces of labor and argues for a class politics that centers race and gender. Natalie Moore, Chicago journalist, recounts federal layoffs hitting Black women and the struggle to translate public-sector skills. They discuss hidden reproductive labor, racialized job restructuring, and building cross-movement solidarity.
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Mar 23, 2026 • 2h 21min

The Dig: Nusantara Ep. 1 — The Long Arc of Dutch Colonialism

Made Supriyatma, researcher on Indonesian politics and civil-military relations, and Rihanna Subianto, communication scholar of Indonesian left history, trace centuries of Dutch corporate and state domination. They discuss VOC brutality, monopoly spice wars, cultivation systems, plantation and oil expansion, racial legal hierarchies, and the bureaucratic roots of Indonesian nationalism.
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12 snips
Mar 18, 2026 • 47min

Confronting Capitalism: Trump’s Historic Blunder in Iran

Jason Brownlee, professor of government at UT Austin and scholar of regime change, discusses U.S.-Iran tensions. They examine the shaky justifications for the attack and why regime-change aims trump security claims. Conversation covers how U.S. pressure drives Iranian militarization, historical failures of imposed leadership, and why fragmenting Iran risks chaos rather than control.
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Mar 17, 2026 • 58min

Jacobin Radio: 2003 All Over Again w/ Kevan Harris

Kevan Harris, UCLA historical sociologist and Iran expert, maps Iran’s protest cycles and political economy. He unpacks sanctions-driven industrial decline, the IRGC’s corrupt empire, and how repression reshaped dissent. He warns bombing will not spark revolution and outlines regional escalation risks while urging urgent anti-war organizing.
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10 snips
Mar 16, 2026 • 53min

Behind the News: Homeland Empire w/ Nikhil Pal Singh

Nikhil Pal Singh, historian and NYU professor who directs a prison education program, explores how the Trump regime fuses foreign and domestic policy into a unified model of coercion. He examines spectacle, racial and nativist imagery, mass deportation plans, expanded detention and paramilitary policing, and how settler fantasies shape aggression abroad and at home.
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Mar 11, 2026 • 32min

Long Reads: Trump’s Nation-Breaking War w/ Afshin Matin-Asgari

Afshin Matin-Asgari, a Middle East history professor and author on Iran–US relations, joins to unpack the recent US–Israeli war on Iran. He traces how the campaign breaks historical patterns. He describes civilian devastation, information blackouts, leadership turmoil, diaspora politics, and competing war aims. The conversation probes what survival or collapse would mean for Iran and global consequences.

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