Clifford Norris
New in Ceasefire, The Anti-Imperialist - Tuesday, December 20, 2011 12:00 - 4 Comments
The Anti-Imperialist | Stephen Lawrence, Lord MacPherson and Sergeant XX

As the long-standing suspects of Stephen Lawrence's murder are put on trial, Adam Elliott-Cooper argues that only by understanding the context of institutional racism, and the overarching power structures that give rise to it, can we fully address these crimes and seek justice for their victims.
More Ideas
- Analysis | “When I’m down again, there will be nothing for me”: The Government’s Unseen War on Migrant Health
- Ideas | Place and Prejudice: On Liverpool, Hillsborough and Territorial Stigma
- Analysis | Batons vs Ballots: On the Catalan Referendum
- Opinion | Saudi’s bombing campaign is destroying my country, Yemen, and Britain is helping them do it
- Analysis | The war on Yemen is about capitalism, not sectarianism
More In Politics
- Politics | New documents reveal GCHQ tried to undermine the independence of its own regulator
- Comment | How many more Yemenis must die before Theresa May stops putting profits before lives?
- Politics | Victory for anti-racism campaigners as Nigel Farage withdraws false claims about HOPE not hate
- Comment | The Power of Civic Resistance: Reflections on the Muhammad Rabbani Case
- Politics | The Balfour Declaration: After a Century of British Complicity; it’s Time to Make It Right
More In Features
- Special Report | “Do the right thing”: Campaigners urge Nottingham University to pay the Living Wage
- Special Report | The EU’s approach to the Mediterranean migration crisis is costing lives
- Special Report | Dabke dancing, Football and Hip-Hop: A week of protests in the lead-up to the DSEI arms fair
- Special Report | ‘War starts here, let’s stop it here’: Anger as death-dealers head for London
- Photo Essay | After Grenfell Tower: On the decades-long war on social housing
More In Profiles
More In Arts & Culture
- Books | Shy Radicals: The Antisystemic Politics of the Militant Introvert, by Hamja Ahsan
- Books | An Anthem of a Revolution That Was — A Revolution That Will Be: ‘The City Always Wins’ by Omar Robert Hamilton
- Television | ‘My Week As a Muslim’: A well-meaning, patronising caricature
- Theatre | Review | ‘Searingly humane, compelling theatre’: My Name Is Rachel Corrie (Young Vic)
- Arts & Culture | Exhibition | Pop Art From North Africa (P21 Gallery)