Eyal Press

Eyal Press is a Nation contributing writer. The paperback of his first book, Absolute Convictions: My Father, a City, and the Conflict That Divided America, is just out from Picador.

Currently

  • Is the Party Over?

    May 15, 2008

    In the past two years, the GOP's dream of a permanent majority has become a nightmare.

  • Israeli Army Vets Speak Out

    March 1, 2008

    Breaking the Silence comes to America.

  • Chafee Chastened

    February 14, 2008

    In his recent memoir, former GOP insider Lincoln Chafee boldly decries the Bush era.

2007

  • Rights of Passage

    December 13, 2007

    How can momentum be restored to the struggle for human rights? Begin by drawing the world's religions into the conversation.

  • The Optimist

    November 15, 2007

    To those who follow the Israeli-Palestinian conflict closely, the prospects for a two-state solution have never seemed dimmer. So why does veteran peacenik Uri Avnery remain so hopeful?

  • The Missing Class

    July 26, 2007

    Sociologist Katherine Newman talks about the "near poor," that vast pool of workers who are neither officially destitute nor comfortably working-class.

  • Silencing New Voices

    April 20, 2007

    What happens when a student magazine committed to fostering dialogue opens its pages to critical views on Israel?

  • The New Suburban Poverty

    April 13, 2007

    For the first time, more poor Americans live in the nation's suburbs than in all our cities combined.

2006

  • Letters

    November 29, 2006 Subscribe

  • In God's Country

    November 2, 2006

    The secular left should think twice before casting religious people as its foes. After all, alienating potential allies and confining ourselves to a small sect of like-minded believers is what fundamentalism is all about.

  • Fallout in Israel

    August 24, 2006 Subscribe

    Israel's war with Hezbollah may have strengthened the hand of the Israeli right, which has forgotten that peace comes only by negotiating with those you do not trust.

  • The Left Gets Real

    August 4, 2006 Subscribe

    Is the coziness of progressives and foreign policy realists a strategic alliance or a sign that the conservative co-optation of "human rights" has disillusioned the left?

  • Keeping Gideon's Promise

    March 16, 2006 Subscribe

    Montana is setting the stage for other states in its push to improve legal representation for the poor and to address the lack of competent public attorneys.

  • Ruling Class Warriors

    January 5, 2006

    House Republicans rammed through a budget bill in December that cuts $40 billion from domestic programs. Is there anyone of conscience in the Senate to defeat this?

2005

  • Middlemarch

    December 15, 2005

    The GOP is an object of popular loathing, yet prospects seem dim for ousting it from power. Three new books explain why: Off Center explores the GOP's genius for subverting the mechanisms of accountability, and Death by a Thousand Cuts and Stand Up Fight Back examine how the Republican machine dominates issues from tax cuts to energy conservation. Plus, the Clinton biography The Survivor looks at the man who once made liberals feel like winners, yet whose legacy holds them back.

  • Alito's CAP Connection

    November 22, 2005

    Samuel Alito once boasted he was a member of Concerned Alumni of Princeton, which opposed bemoaned the impact of co-education and affirmative action. What does this say about his character and the kind of place he would like America to be?

  • Darwin on Trial

    November 9, 2005 Subscribe

    As the site of a trial on including intelligent design in biology textbooks, Dover, Pennsylvania, is a focal point of a national debate on science and religion. But a look at the town and its residents show that the battle may not be so clearly defined.

  • Conservative Crackup

    October 26, 2005

    Bush's lavish subsidies and reckless attempts to export democracy through the barrel of a gun violate conservative principles. Republican realists are finally catching on.

  • 'One Nation, Fragmented'

    September 22, 2005 Subscribe

    It took a Gulf Coast hurricane to make Americans aware of the poverty in their own backyard. Now it's time for public policies that end racial segregation, so that the poor in this country will not continue to suffer.

2004

2003

2002

  • Rebel With a Cause

    May 23, 2002

    Through his new organization, former World Bank economist Joesph Stiglitz hopes to do nothing less than end the World Bank and IMF's monopoly on development policy.

  • Kerrey's Case: Not Closed

    May 2, 2002

2000

  • Human Rights--The Next Step

    December 7, 2000

    A consideration of economic rights as coequal with civil and political rights may be the only way for the human rights movement to recapture its power and urgency.

1999

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