[9][7] The text was published in six different languages - English, Urdu, Hindi, Gujarati, Bengali and Punjabi - in order to make it accessible to as many readers as possible both to read and contribute to the magazine.
Mukti played and important role in distributing practical information for feminist and anti-racist activism among South Asian communities in Britain as well as providing a forum for debate, dissensus and consciousness raising.
[2] Mukti has been celebrated as being a strategically important node for building coalitional feminist politics across a wide spectrum of British South Asian communities.
[4] Contributors offered readers advice and guidance on a range of issues: The Mukti Collective included many artists and teachers.
Prominent artist Chila Burman designed a front cover and wrote an article on shared ownership housing.