indymedia
Ideas, New in Ceasefire - Sunday, February 17, 2013 13:18 - 18 Comments
Analysis | Indymedia: It’s time to move on

Launched in 1999 at the dawn of the anti-globalisation movement, the Indymedia publishing model represented a revolutionary step forward in democratic, non-corporate media production. And yet, a decade on, it seems the moment has arrived to ask whether it is still useful and necessary to the social movements that it grew from.
More Ideas
- Analysis | ‘Greater Jerusalem’ and beyond: The Netanyahu-Trump Doctrine is Under Way
- 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
More In Politics
- Comment | Occupation, Dispossession, Apartheid: These are the realities unmasked by Trump’s Jerusalem speech
- Politics | Susiya: Israel expands plans to demolish almost half of Palestinian village
- 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
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)