Everything in the present changes everything in the past
Our writersNavigation |
![]() |
Our new quarterly journal builds on an established online reputation for going beyond and behind the headlines to bring you informed dialogue and debate. Here, you can find the best of openDemocracy within a single volume. A thematic approach ensures that each edition brings a spectrum of ideas from renowned authors, expert scholars, and global voices on the ground to bear in a unique mix. Subscribe now, and get a yearly discount*** Current IssueQuarterly Series
1.4: Undercurrent: life after Katrina
Jim Gabour | January 2008 | £9
New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina in 2005 was a devastated city: neglected by the authorities, deprived of basic services, deserted by thousands of its inhabitants, haunted by loss and tragedy. Jim Gabour, resident and writer, decided to stay. In the months after Katrina, he sent a series of reports and reflections on how he, his family, his neighbours, friends and fellow-citizens were coping with the aftermath and reconstructing their homes and lives. In the resulting everyday epics of survival and discovery, the heart and soul of a wounded but life-affirming New Orleans quietly unfolds. Quarterly Series
1.3: Europe: Visions, Realities, Futures
July 2007 | £9
Europe is at once geographical expression, historical creation, cultural space, and political project. In the early 21st century, it is also a site of contention, involving competing visions of its identity, boundaries and future. Published in a "big year" for Europe, this third edition is intended as a unique guide, resource and stimulus to help make sense of where Europe has been and where it is going. ![]()
1.2: Turkey: Writers, Politics and Free Speech
April 2007 | £9
In memoriam, Hrant Dink (1954-2007) ![]()
1.1: Europe and Islam: Controversy, Protest, Dialogue
January 2007 | £9
The London bombings, the Danish cartoon controversy and Pope Benedict XVI's "evil and inhuman" speech in Regensburg were some of the markers of a difficult new phase in Europe and Islam's long shared history. In this collection, we see in openDemocracy writers' commentary the premonitions of the events yet to come. The challenge as we read is to listen for those echoes from the future ![]()
Subscribe now, and get a yearly discount*All prices are in UK sterling. We accept payment directly via your PayPal account or major credit card. Subscriptions paid using PayPal, will renew automatically, unless you cancel it. Unless we state in writing otherwise, all fees and charges are nonrefundable. |
![]() |
The World
|
Recent comments
33 min 4 sec ago
3 hours 1 min ago
4 hours 58 min ago
6 hours 13 sec ago
6 hours 9 min ago
6 hours 47 min ago
6 hours 58 min ago
7 hours 52 min ago
9 hours 23 min ago
10 hours 13 min ago