Sasha Lilley born 1975 is an English-born writer, journalist, and radio broadcaster based in the San Francisco Bay Area, whose work focuses on social movements, intellectual history, and political economy. She is the editor of Capital and Its Discontents: Conversations with Radical Thinkers in a Time of Tumult, published by PM Press, which includes interviews with Marxist intellectuals David Harvey,[1] Tariq Ali, Mike Davis, Ursula Huws, Noam Chomsky, and others.[2] Lilley is a contributor to the Turbulence Collective's What Would it Mean to Win?, a collection of debates about the direction of the Global Justice Movement, published by PM Press.[3] She is the series editor of the political economy imprint Spectre, which has published works by Leo Panitch, Sam Gindin, David McNally, and E. P. Thompson.[4] Lilley is married to PM Press and AK Press founder Ramsey Kanaan.
Lilley is a co-founder and host of the Pacifica Radio program Against the Grain.[5] From 2007-2009, she was the interim program director at KPFA. She directed Pacifica Radio’s coverage of the Winter Soldier hearings in Silver Spring, Maryland,[6] launched the War Comes Home,[7] about the human costs of the Iraq and Afghanistan occupations, curated the multimedia project “1968: The Year that Shook the World” commemorating 1968 with archival audio from the Pacifica Radio Archives, and launched the multimedia collaboration “Afghanistan 2008: Seven Years After the Taliban”.[8] She has overseen national broadcasts,[9] including on torture under the Bush Administration,[10] the testimonials of survivors of Hurricane Katrina, and on the global financial crisis.[11]
Lilley was an editor, staff writer, and researcher at CorpWatch for a number of years, reporting on the World Bank, labor struggles, and agribusiness,[12] amongst other areas. She has worked as an academic researcher and investigative journalist, including into US contracts in Iraq[13] following the American-led invasion.[14]
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