Socialist Review is a monthly magazine covering current events, theory and history, books and arts reviews from a revolutionary socialist perspective. It is the sister publication of Socialist Worker.
Socialist Worker is a revolutionary socialist newspaper produced by the Socialist Workers Party, Britain’s largest revolutionary socialist organisation. It has been published every week since 1968. This website (https://socialistworker.co.uk/) contains online reports, articles from the print edition, together with an archive of Socialist Worker stories going back to 1999.
It has a long record of supporting the workers’ movement in Britain, from its high point in the early 1970s, through the tremendous battles fought against Margaret Thatcher’s government in the 1980s, right up to today’s strikes against austerity and David Cameron’s coalition.
Over the years the newspaper also supported struggles against racism and for the rights of women, sexual minorities and other oppressed groups. Socialist Worker played a key role in the foundation of the Anti Nazi League in 1977 that saw off the fascist National Front, and it continues that tradition today with its support of Unite Against Fascism’s campaign against the Nazis and racists of the British National Party and English Defence League.
Socialist Worker is also an anti-war paper which has consistently opposed all imperial wars and occupations, whether it’s the British army in the North of Ireland, the Israeli occupation of Palestine the US-British assault on Iraq or the ongoing Nato operations in Afghanistan. It supports all struggles of oppressed people against their rulers and bosses, from the miners of Marikana to the current revolutions taking place across the Middle East.
Above all Socialist Worker is a revolutionary paper. It doesn’t believe the capitalist system can be patched up or reformed. It has to be brought down by workers rising up against it, and replaced with a socialist society based on equality and organised around human need, not profit.
Source: http://www.scienceandsociety.com/