Economic systems and structures Books

721 products


  • Dream Zones Anticipating Capitalism and

    Pluto Press Dream Zones Anticipating Capitalism and

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisExplores the dreams and desired futures of workers, farmers and politicians that sustain and disrupt capitalism in contemporary India.Trade Review'This is an important and fascinating book. Engagingly written and ethnographically rich, Dream Zones reveals the multiple meanings, contestations and realities of Special Economic Zones in India' -- Katy Gardner, Professor of Anthropology at London School of EconomicsTable of ContentsList of Maps and Figures Series Preface Acknowledgements Glossary and Abbreviations Note on Language 1. The Economy of Anticipation 2. The Vision of Growth 3. The Land of Speculation 4. The Factory of the Future 5. The Labour of Aspiration 6. The Struggles for Tomorrow 7. Anticipation, Capitalism, Anthropology Notes Bibliography Index

    1 in stock

    £72.25

  • Ukraine and the Empire of Capital

    Pluto Press Ukraine and the Empire of Capital

    Book SynopsisAn ambitious analysis of contemporary Ukrainian political economy.Trade Review'Provides an ambitious historical materialist analysis of the crisis in Ukraine ... an analysis that is not only appropriate, but largely absent and therefore sorely needed in this subject area' -- Marko Bojcun,'In this thought-provoking book, Yulia Yurchenko focuses on Ukraine's class dynamics and political economy and puts them in international context. Her analytical approach is a breath of fresh air amidst a fog of stale commentary that assumes Ukraine is all about geopolitical “pro-western” or “pro-Russian” narratives' -- Simon Pirani, Senior Visiting Research Fellow, Oxford Institute for Energy StudiesTable of ContentsList of Figures and Tables List of Abbreviations Acknowledgements Preface Map of Ukraine 1. Per Aspera ad Nebulae, or to Market Through a Hybrid Civil War: Survival Myths of Systemic Failure 2. Capitalist Antecedents in the Late USSR 3. Social Destruction and Kleptocratic Construction of the Early 1990s 4. Class Formation and Social Fragmentation 5. Neoliberal Kleptocracy, FDI and Transnational Capital 6. ‘Two Ukraines’, One ‘Family’ and Geopolitical Crossroads 7. The Bloody Winter and the ‘Gates of Europe’ 8. Geopolitics, the Elusive ‘Other’ and the Nebulous Telos of Europe Notes Bibliography Index

    £72.25

  • The New Reckoning

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd The New Reckoning

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisWe are told that this is a new world, with which old theories cannot cope. But the dynamic driving the current global transformation is not as new as our pundits and politicians pretend. The global market-place of our day may have little in common with the tamed welfare capitalism of the post-war period but it is uncannily reminiscent of the untamed capitalism of 100 years ago. Keynes and Beveridge may be dead, but Marx, Malthus and Ricardo have had a new lease of life. In these timely essays, David Marquand challenges the fashionable amnesia of the 1990s and addresses the crucial questions raised by the capitalist renaissance which has followed the collapse of Communism and the end of the cold war. In this bewildering new world, which is at the same time an all-too-familiar old world, how can the values of social solidarity and democratic citizenship be realized? Granted that socialism is no longer with us, does it have anything to say from beyond the grave? HoTrade Review"David Marquand's quest to understand our times and so reinvent the British liberal tradition has been one of the most important influences on British politics over the last ten years - and on me personally. The New Reckoning assembles some of his most challenging and thought-provoking writing - and it is as subtle, intelligent and persuasive as I have come to expect. Another important contribution from the master." Will Hutton "David Marquand is that very rare bird these days - a politician (somewhat ex - by his own choice) who is more interested in ideas than in the gossip of who's in and who's out. As however he writes with a flair and even a raciness which should make most gossip columnists green with envy, he is immensely readable. He also writes with a rigorous and disinterested intellectual courage. He follows his argument where it takes him, without regard to which political interests it offends or supports. This book of essays, some old and some new, would be worthwhile just for its brilliant introduction (significantly entitled Journey to an Unknown Destination) alone. But it also has much else of wisdom on the dilemmas of modern societies." The Right Hon. Lord Jenkins of Hillhead "No observer of Labour's postwar evolution is more perceptive or more deeply reflective than David Marquand. The result is one of the most arresting and thought-stirring books on politics to have appeared for many years. It has the rare merit of combining theoretical and historical vision with an intimate understanding of political practice. It is also a fascinating fragment of political and intellectual autobiography." The New Statesman and Society "David Marquand's latest offering will not disappoint: his eloquent style, rigorous analysis and challenging commentary characterises The New Reckoning. [It] engages the reader in a thought-provoking, intelligent debate from which few of us will escape without new insights to the political era over which the Blair government presides." The Stakeholder "David Marquand is an engaging and stylish political thinker, who moves adventurously across academic frontiers and straddles the worlds of scholarship and politics." Prospect "Marquand has fluently channelled some of his most challenging and thought provoking arguments into what promises to be one of the most influential contributions to modern British politics." Social Science "The next instalment from this reflective mind will be worth waiting for." The Economist "It is the work of Britain's most scrupulous liberal commentator on politics ... producing essays of clarity and fine judgment." The Times Literary Supplement "Comparative and international in his perspective, non-sectarian in his argument, clear in his prose, Marquand brings together a command of political economy, history and political culture and a commitment to the people that belongs to that time. In his writing he makes the fusion that he calls for in British politics." The Guardian "A fascinating account of his own intellectual development." Government and Opposition "Marquand's arguments and interpretations are lucid, thought provoking and undeniably pertinent." International AffairsTable of ContentsAcknowledgements. 1. Journey to an Unknown Destination. Part I: Capitalism, Socialism and Citizenship:. 2. Reinventing Civic Republicanism. 3. After Socialism. 4. Liberalism's Revenge? Resolving the Progressive Dilemma. Part II: Europe:. 5. The Politics of Monetary Union. 6. The New Medievalism. 7. Reinventing Federalism. Part III: Britain:. 8. History Derailed?. 9. The Enterprise Culture: Old Wine in New Bottles?. 10. Henry Dubb versus Sceptred Awe. 11. Collaborative Capitalism and Constitutional Reform. 12. Travels of an Ancien Régime. Notes. Index.

    1 in stock

    £49.50

  • The New Reckoning  Capitalism States and Citizens

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd The New Reckoning Capitalism States and Citizens

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsisaeo This is a major new book by one of Britaina s foremost political commentators. aeo The volume offers a comprehensive re--interpretation of British politics from the Second World War to the present. aeoMarquand poses sharp dilemmas and new questions for our politicians faced with the extension of capitalism on a transnational basis.Trade Review"David Marquand's quest to understand our times and so reinvent the British liberal tradition has been one of the most important influences on British politics over the last ten years - and on me personally. The New Reckoning assembles some of his most challenging and thought-provoking writing - and it is as subtle, intelligent and persuasive as I have come to expect. Another important contribution from the master." Will Hutton "David Marquand is that very rare bird these days - a politician (somewhat ex - by his own choice) who is more interested in ideas than in the gossip of who's in and who's out. As however he writes with a flair and even a raciness which should make most gossip columnists green with envy, he is immensely readable. He also writes with a rigorous and disinterested intellectual courage. He follows his argument where it takes him, without regard to which political interests it offends or supports. This book of essays, some old and some new, would be worthwhile just for its brilliant introduction (significantly entitled Journey to an Unknown Destination) alone. But it also has much else of wisdom on the dilemmas of modern societies." The Right Hon. Lord Jenkins of Hillhead "No observer of Labour's postwar evolution is more perceptive or more deeply reflective than David Marquand. The result is one of the most arresting and thought-stirring books on politics to have appeared for many years. It has the rare merit of combining theoretical and historical vision with an intimate understanding of political practice. It is also a fascinating fragment of political and intellectual autobiography." The New Statesman and Society "David Marquand's latest offering will not disappoint: his eloquent style, rigorous analysis and challenging commentary characterises The New Reckoning. [It] engages the reader in a thought-provoking, intelligent debate from which few of us will escape without new insights to the political era over which the Blair government presides." The Stakeholder "David Marquand is an engaging and stylish political thinker, who moves adventurously across academic frontiers and straddles the worlds of scholarship and politics." Prospect "Marquand has fluently channelled some of his most challenging and thought provoking arguments into what promises to be one of the most influential contributions to modern British politics." Social Science "The next instalment from this reflective mind will be worth waiting for." The Economist "It is the work of Britain's most scrupulous liberal commentator on politics ... producing essays of clarity and fine judgment." The Times Literary Supplement "Comparative and international in his perspective, non-sectarian in his argument, clear in his prose, Marquand brings together a command of political economy, history and political culture and a commitment to the people that belongs to that time. In his writing he makes the fusion that he calls for in British politics." The Guardian "A fascinating account of his own intellectual development." Government and Opposition "Marquand's arguments and interpretations are lucid, thought provoking and undeniably pertinent." International AffairsTable of ContentsAcknowledgements. 1. Journey to an Unknown Destination. Part I: Capitalism, Socialism and Citizenship:. 2. Reinventing Civic Republicanism. 3. After Socialism. 4. Liberalism's Revenge? Resolving the Progressive Dilemma. Part II: Europe:. 5. The Politics of Monetary Union. 6. The New Medievalism. 7. Reinventing Federalism. Part III: Britain:. 8. History Derailed?. 9. The Enterprise Culture: Old Wine in New Bottles?. 10. Henry Dubb versus Sceptred Awe. 11. Collaborative Capitalism and Constitutional Reform. 12. Travels of an Ancien Régime. Notes. Index.

    1 in stock

    £17.09

  • Governing the World Economy

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Governing the World Economy

    3 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe global financial crisis of 1997--8 revealed that emerging market nations as well as the developed economies are vulnerable to the forces of globalization. It highlighted the need for the governance of the world economy to catch up with the pace and degree of integration through trade and financial markets.Trade Review'Diane Coyle has written a clear and rigorous analysis of the international trade and investment system. If we are to understand the challenges of globalisation, this is one book that we should all read.' Meghnad Desai, London School of Economics 'Diane Coyle has her finger on what will surely be one of the foremost political issues of the coming decade -- the ascendancy of globally integrated finance capitalism, and in particular who benefits and who loses from it. Her insights are thoughtful, her conclusions sound, her explanations consistently instructive. And as usual, her lively writing crackles with concrete examples and thought-provoking facts.' Benjamin M. Friedman, Harvard University 'Diane Coyle, one of the best of the very bright generation of economic writers British journalism has thrown up in recent years.' Denis MacShane, The Independent 'This thoughtful book by the economics editor of The Independent packs a fair amount into its 166 pages. A passionate free marketeer, who also believes that free markets need a great deal of scrutiny, Coyle argues that present trading conditions offer a rare opportunity to improve the world economy.' The Sunday TimesTable of ContentsAcknowledgements. Introduction. Chapter One: Frankenstein Finance. Chapter Two: Myths and Reality In Financial Markets. Chapter Three: Division of the Spoils. Chapter Four: A New International Architecture. Chapter Five: The New 'New Economy'. Notes. Bibliography. Index

    3 in stock

    £42.75

  • An AntiCapitalist Manifesto

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd An AntiCapitalist Manifesto

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe great demonstrations at Seattle and Genoa have shown that we are in a new era of protest. The neo--liberal economic policies pursued by the Group of Seven leading industrial countries and the international institutions they control are provoking widespread resistance.Trade Review'This is a tremendous polemic and analysis: robust, articulate, engaging, accessible, informative, uncompromising and provocative.' Professor Anthony McGrew, Department of Politics, University of Southampton "...this book contains some undeniably valuable arguments and explanations of Marxist concepts" Kit Robinson, Weekly Worker, July 2003 "a politically engaged book" John Gray, The Independent "insightful and surprisingly non-ideological" Ethical Corporation MagazineTable of ContentsIntroduction. An unscheduled event. The revival of social critique. Naming the movement. Another unscheduled event. Chapter 1 Capitalism Against the Planet. So What’s the Problem?. Financial Follies. The Perpetual Motion Machine. Accumulation and Catastrophe. The Sword of Leviathan. Chapter 2 Varieties and Strategies. Varieties of Anti-Capitalism. Reform or Revolution?. Chapter 3 Imagining Other Worlds. Anti-Capitalist Values. A Note on Diversity. What’s Wrong with the Market?. Why We Need Planning. A Transitional Programme. Afterword. Notes. Index

    1 in stock

    £45.00

  • An AntiCapitalist Manifesto

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd An AntiCapitalist Manifesto

    Book SynopsisThe great demonstrations at Seattle and Genoa have shown that we are in a new era of protest. The neo-liberal economic policies pursued by the Group of Seven leading industrial countries and the international institutions they control are provoking widespread resistance. Growing numbers of people in all five continents are rejecting the values of the market and the vision of a world made safe for the multinational corporations. But what does the anti-globalization movement stand for? Is it, as its most common name suggests, against globalization itself? Is it opposed merely to the neo-liberal Washington Consensus that became dominant in the 1980s and 1990s, or is its real enemy the capitalist system itself? The World Social Forum at Porto Alegre has popularized the slogan Another World is Possible'. But what is that world? Alex Callinicos seeks to answer these questions in An Anti-Capitalist Manifesto. He analyses the development of the movement, distinguishes bTrade Review'This is a tremendous polemic and analysis: robust, articulate, engaging, accessible, informative, uncompromising and provocative.' Professor Anthony McGrew, Department of Politics, University of Southampton "...this book contains some undeniably valuable arguments and explanations of Marxist concepts" Kit Robinson, Weekly Worker, July 2003 "a politically engaged book" John Gray, The Independent "insightful and surprisingly non-ideological" Ethical Corporation MagazineTable of ContentsIntroduction. An unscheduled event. The revival of social critique. Naming the movement. Another unscheduled event. Chapter 1 Capitalism Against the Planet. So What’s the Problem?. Financial Follies. The Perpetual Motion Machine. Accumulation and Catastrophe. The Sword of Leviathan. Chapter 2 Varieties and Strategies. Varieties of Anti-Capitalism. Reform or Revolution?. Chapter 3 Imagining Other Worlds. Anti-Capitalist Values. A Note on Diversity. What’s Wrong with the Market?. Why We Need Planning. A Transitional Programme. Afterword. Notes. Index

    £15.19

  • New Capitalism  The Transformation of Work

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd New Capitalism The Transformation of Work

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn this stimulating and highly original work, Kevin Doogan looks at contemporary social transformation through the lens of the labour market. Major themes of the day -- globalization, technological change and the new economy, the pension and demographic timebombs, flexibility and traditional employment -- are all subject to critical scrutiny.Trade Review"Highly recommended - particularly significant with regard to the current crisis of the financial markets." Journal of Contemporary European Studies "A really valuable book which will remind everyone that our side still has power - if we use it." International Socialism "A well structured and attractively written text that represents a fine contribution to the analysis of contemporary development in the world of work." Work, Employment and Society "Doogan's New Capitalism? presents a challenging new vision of current and future connections between employees and employers. New Capitalism? provides a theoretically insightful and empirically informed critique of visions focused on the increasing precariousness of employment. A must read for scholars and students of work, economy and polity." Randy Hodson, Ohio State University "Reality is more intelligent than the prophets of “New capitalism”, who ask for radically deregulated financial, product and labour markets. With the present collapse, public bailout and re-regulation of the financial system, Doogan’s findings, that long term jobs have continued to grow as a productive asset for the economy, are particular welcome." Peter Auer, Chief of the Employment Analysis and Research Unit, ILO, Geneva "Kevin Doogan annihilates conventional wisdom on labour markets. The extraordinary wealth and depth of data which he has amassed will make readers wonder why so many were misled for so long. But Doogan has an answer for this too. The arrival of this book is a seismic event which will send shockwaves in every political direction." Ralph Fevre, Cardiff University School of Social Sciences "An excellent book." Socialist ReviewTable of ContentsList of figures and tables viii Preface ix Acknowledgements xii Introduction 1 1 From Post-Industrial Society to New Capitalism: The Evolution of a Narrative of Social Change 16 2 Technological Change: Autonomization and Dematerialization 43 3 Globalization: Mobility, Transnationality and Employment 63 4 Theorizing the Labour Market 88 5 Globalization, Demographic Change and Social Welfare 114 6 The Flexible Labour Market and the Contingent Economy 143 7 Long-term Employment and the New Economy 169 8 Job Insecurity, Precarious Employment and Manufactured Uncertainty 194 9 Conclusion 207 References 215 Index 231

    1 in stock

    £49.50

  • Capitalism

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Capitalism

    Book SynopsisNow with a substantial new postscript on the financial crisis This book provides a basic introduction to the 'nuts and bolts' of capitalism. It starts by examining the classic accounts of capitalism found in the works of Adam Smith, Karl Marx, Max Weber, Joseph Schumpeter, and John Maynard Keynes.Trade Review"The most informative interpretation of the current crisis I have yet encountered."LSE Politics Blog "A must-read for both sociologists and economists - indeed for anyone wanting to deepen their understanding of the systemic nature of today's global financial crisis."openDemocracy"One of the best introductions to the economics of capitalism I've read in a long time. Well argued, researched and referenced throughout, it is often a sheer pleasure to read."Morning Star "A highly accessible and enjoyable introductory text to the all-pervasive economic system in the modern era."Political Studies Review "A good introduction to the basic structure of the capitalist model."Tribune "An impressively broad, but also theoretically detailed and empirically well-illustrated, exploration of how capitalism works and develops today. By reading Ingham's comprehensive book, our students will surely become more knowledgeable and probably also better sociologists."Acta Sociologica "Not just an excellent summary of key themes and literatures on capitalism, but also a highly instructive first approach to the contemporary issue of all issues, the global financial crisis."Wolfgang Streeck, Socio-economic Review "In this meticulous and superbly crafted book Geoff Ingham dissects the nature of capitalism as a complex economic order in which money plays a central role. In developing his rich account he draws upon a remarkable range of theorists and examples which will make the book essential reading to students not only of sociology but throughout the social sciences."Mike Savage, University of Manchester "As an economic system, capitalism forms the basis for western society and for sociological understandings of society. Here, Ingham provides a useful summary of the key institutional elements of a capitalist economy, and an insightful discussion of the key theorists of capitalism. Many will appreciate his ability to cover so much material so ably."Bruce Carruthers, Northwestern UniversityTable of ContentsIntroduction 1 Part I Classical theories of capitalism 5 1 Smith, Marx and Weber 7 2 Schumpeter and Keynes 36 3 The basic elements of capitalism 52 Part II The institutions 63 4 Money 65 5 Market exchange 92 6 The enterprise 119 7 Capital and financial markets 147 8 The state 175 9 Conclusions 204 Postscript: the financial crisis and its aftermath 227 Notes 265 References 290 Index 304

    £21.84

  • Social Movements in Times of Austerity

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Social Movements in Times of Austerity

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisRecent years have seen an enormous increase in protests across the world in which citizens have challenged what they see as a deterioration of democratic institutions and the very civil, political and social rights that form the basis of democratic life. Beginning with Iceland in 2008, and then forcefully in Egypt, Tunisia, Spain, Greece and Portugal, or more recently in Peru, Brazil, Russia, Bulgaria, Turkey and Ukraine, people have taken to the streets against what they perceive as a rampant and dangerous corruption of democracy, with a distinct focus on inequality and suffering.This timely new book addresses the anti-austerity social movements of which these protests form part, mobilizing in the context of a crisis of neoliberalism. Donatella della Porta shows that, in order to understand their main facets in terms of social basis, strategy, and identity and organizational structures, we should look at the specific characteristics of the socioeconomic, cultural and politTrade Review"This book, written by one of the foremost theorists of social movements, offers a new way to theorise the complex conjuncture of late neo-liberalism, a 'precariat' that includes the young and educated. and a legitimacy crisis of our political institutions and how this plays out in the squares of Europe, America and the Middle East."—Mary Kaldor, The London School of Economics "Scholars of social movements have largely ignored capitalism in recent years, but Donatella della Porta shows how a crisis of neoliberal capitalism has provided the main motives and solidarities for recent protests against economic austerity and political corruption. Hers is a very important and original attempt to bridge political economy and contentious politics."—Jeff Goodwin, New York University "Among scholars of contemporary social movements, della Porta is unique in combining inquiry about resources for mobilization, political cleavages, and diverse experiences of neoliberal capitalism.... Highly recommended." —Choice "Della Porta's argument is complex, but coherent and convincing. The book helps shed light on the political-economic dimension of anti-austerity protests. The renewed focus on capitalism resonates with the current debate on causes and effects of inequality (for example, Piketty, Stiglitz), and should trigger more research."—Thomas Mättig, Democratization "[A]n important novelty in the field of social movement studies. The successful attempt to combine an innovative theoretical framework with a rich and detailed empirical analysis of the recent (and less recent) global waves of protest pushes forward a significant renewal in the analytical toolkit of this discipline and an expansion of its research themes in a hitherto unexplored direction."—Journal of Economics and Political EconomyTable of ContentsAcknowledgements vi 1 The Re-emergence of a Class Cleavage? Social Movements in Times of Austerity 1 2 Social Structure: Old Working Class, New Precariat, or Yet Something Different? 26 3 Identification Processes: Class and Culture 67 4 Lo Llaman Democracia Y No Lo Es: A Crisis of Political Responsibility 110 5 Democracy Is Not a Spectator Sport: Changing Conceptions of Democracy in Social Movements 157 6 Bringing Capitalism Back into Protest Analysis? Some Concluding Remarks 211 Notes 226 References 228 Index 247

    1 in stock

    £49.50

  • Cities in Global Capitalism

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Cities in Global Capitalism

    3 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn what ways are cities central to the evolution of contemporary global capitalism? And in what ways is global capitalism forged by the urban experience? This book provides a response to these questions, exploring the multifaceted dimensions of the city-capitalism nexus.Trade Review"Ugo Rossi offers a highly original analysis of the current urban condition. The book plays imaginatively on the complex relationships linking cities, neoliberal capitalism and globalization and extracts from these materials a remarkably informative and incisive diagnosis." - Allen J. Scott, UCLA "In this historically grounded, highly current and well-argued volume, Rossi combines critical reviews of diverse theoretical currents and empirical analyses to highlight recent trends, crises and struggles in and beyond the capitalist heartlands. He explores the growing links between neoliberalism and globalization, making cities ever more critical as sites of everyday resistance as well as crucial spaces of accumulation. Enjoy reading this book and acting upon it." - Bob Jessop, Lancaster University "Rossi provides a remarkably comprehensive, clear, and tremendously useful survey of theorizations of the relation between cities and capitalism. As he does so, he offers the reader a rich exploration of the many facets of that complex and mutually constitutive relation." - Miranda Joseph, The University of Arizona "Reading contemporary global capital from the perspective of the city, Ugo Rossi's Cities in Global Capitalism presents a critical geography, rich in analysis and haunted with spectral figures. Rossi shows how the city - the site of historical struggle, artistic and social innovations, and revolutionary uprisings - has been shaped by capital and its state partners with new spatial inequalities, potentialities, and peripheries. As the city once again becomes the destination for the global rich, economic innovation becomes a leading edge of gentrification and the abandoned warehouses of Fordist production become the ghost towers haunting the urban sky - vast areas the mega rich own but rarely inhabit as the ever-expanding homeless below pass by." - Elizabeth A. Povinelli, Columbia University "Cities in Global Capitalism presents an impressive tour de force on the mutually reinforcing relationship between cities, on the one hand, and the capitalist system on the other. Sifting through a wide range of work from across numerous disciplines, Ugo Rossi's account of the contemporary global urban condition is conceptually sophisticated, geographically nuanced and historically sensitive!" - Kevin Ward, University of Manchester "Ugo Rossi's book is a clear and illuminating overview of the complex relationships between globalized capitalism and urban spaces. A valuable contribution to the project of critically reflecting on our contemporary condition." - Nick Srnicek, author of Platform Capitalism and Inventing the Future: Postcapitalism and a World Without Work"The Introduction alone is worth the price of admission. It provides an original, up-to-the-minute […], creative framework and overview of cities in global capitalism that is rare. Others in the field of urban studies provide narrower depictions, specific in-depth explanations. But Rossi gives you the whole show; tries to explain it all. It takes chutzpah. […] As a project, Rossi's is ambitious and sweeping, but it is never out of control, the arguments always systematic and tightly drawn." - Trevor J. Barnes, Papers in Regional ScienceTable of ContentsIntroduction 1. Emergences 2. Extensions 3. Continuities 4. Diffusions 5. Variations Conclusion: Living in the age of ambivalence

    3 in stock

    £45.00

  • Reinventing the Product

    Kogan Page Ltd Reinventing the Product

    Book SynopsisEric Schaeffer leads, as a Senior Managing Director, Accenture's Product Industry X.0 practice, bringing together services across innovation, engineering and product development, manufacturing and digital operations, and product services optimization. He is also the Global Lead for Accenture's Industrial practice, helping automotive, industrial equipment and infrastructure companies to digitally reinvent their businesses and create a new level of innovation and efficiency across the extended connected value chain.David Sovie is Senior Managing Director at Accenture, and Global Lead for High-Tech Industry where he helps clients digitally reinvent their business across the entire value chain. He also leads the Industry X.0 consulting unit for Accenture's Communications, Media and Technology group, which provides digital transformation services across the innovation, engineering, manufacturing and product support business functions.Trade Review"Eric Schaeffer and David Sovie bring some great new insights into the product arena of the future that have broad implications. With grounded skill and enthusiasm Reinventing the Product makes a stringent case for companies to rethink their product strategy, their product road map and their digital capabilities." * Patrick Koller, CEO, Faurecia *"Powerful factors, such as the rapid rise of cloud computing, high-speed networks and Artificial Intelligence, are converging, requiring all product companies to fundamentally transform their products and their company. David Sovie and Eric Schaeffer bring fresh thinking and inspiring practical advice for successfully managing this digital transformation and creating value." * Marco Argenti, Vice President Technology, Amazon Web Services *"Deeply researched and full of innovative insights about AI, platforms and smart products. The 'Product Reinvention Quotient' provides great guidance on how to think about "Product X.0" and how to develop a set of capabilities that are necessary to succeed in the future." * Guido Jouret, Chief Digital Officer, ABB *"The nature of product innovation is fundamentally changing. Reinventing the Product shows how to combine hardware, software and business model innovation in an agile way, to meet fast-changing needs in a world of smart-connected devices. It provides compelling and inspiring case studies and examples to help your company find a way that fits best." * Yoon Lee, Ph. D., Senior Vice President and Division Head Content and Services, Product Innovation Team, Samsung Electronics America *"Eric Schaeffer did it again. After his spearheading Industry X.0, which has inspired our team of entrepreneurs to adapt our digital strategy creatively, he now co-authors with David Sovie a brilliant, richly detailed roadmap to the digital future for all product making companies. No doubt: this is again a must-read." * Zhang Ruimin, Chairman of the Board of Directors and CEO, Haier Group *"Well researched, with vivid illustrations and concrete suggestions, this valuable guide can help firms and leaders to build a new set of priorities and capabilities to succeed in a shifting, digital landscape." * Professor Michael G. Jacobides, Sir Donald Gordon Chair of Entrepreneurship & Innovation, London Business School *"In a time of digitally induced seismic shifts across all fronts, Reinventing the Product captures the impact of this change and thoughtfully develops new value-creation approaches in product development and manufacturing. A groundbreaking book." * Phil Jansen, Vice President Product Development, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles *"Reinventing the Product is a practical guide for harnessing IoT and AI to transform the very basis of a company's offerings. This is a must-read for industrial manufacturers looking to ensure their businesses remain relevant in the digital age." * Tim O’Keeffe, CEO, Symmons Industries *"Digital technologies such as AI, advanced analytics, edge computing, cloud and blockchain are transforming our lives fast. Thoroughly researched, Reinventing the Product doesn't just describe the emergence of a fascinating new product landscape that is shifting from traditional to smart connected products, including autonomous products. It is also an inspiring call-to-action for companies so seize enormous new opportunities fast - good for them, good for users and customers, good for growth and progress of societies." * Professor Dr Christoph Lütge, Peter Löscher Chair of Business Ethics and Global Governance, Technical University of Munich *"David Sovie and Eric Schaeffer lay out a powerful new framework for how to evolve both the product and business strategy needed to succeed in the digital age, and they provide fresh and very concrete recommendations on how to implement it pragmatically. Reinventing the Product should be required reading for all product company executives and their managers." * Bill Bien, Chief Marketing Officer and Head of Strategy, Signify *"This book offers a deep analysis of the major shifts product companies are facing, and provides a well-elaborated blueprint for their future success. Every leader in the industry should learn from this book." * James E. Heppelmann, President and CEO, PTC *"Reinventing the Product not only looks thoroughly at how the disruptive waves of digital technologies will affect product companies (including the subscription economy), it draws on a deep analysis of the five profound shifts they face to provide strategic and practical "how-to" advice for businesses as they develop digital products. An inspirational call-to-action." * Eric Chaniot, Chief Digital Officer, Michelin *"The swiftly emerging world of intelligent smart connected products will reshape industries, business processes, and consumer experiences. Reinventing the Product is an important and essential guide for business leaders, entrepreneurs and investors, looking to chart the course and unlock the value of this important trend." * Paul R. Daugherty, Chief Technology & Innovation Officer, Co-author of the bestseller Human + Machine: Reimagining Work in the Age of AI, Accenture *"A comprehensive analysis on the digitally driven big shifts product-making companies are facing. And a detailed roadmap to innovate and capture the endless opportunities in a fascinating new product world." * Raghunath Mashelkar, National Research Professor and Chairman, Reliance Innovation Council *"In their inspiring new book Eric Schaeffer and Dave Sovie not only show the fundamental shifts product companies are exposed to in digital times; they also provide creative analytical tools and concrete how-to advice for these companies to innovate, stay profitable and grow." * Cyril Perducat, Executive Vice President, Internet of Things & Digital Offers, Schneider Electric *"Eric Schaeffer and Dave Sovie provide a rare encompassing view on there invention of the product, re-imagining the current "digital transformation"trend. Original, remarkably thoughtful and with high practical relevance on every page." * Richard Mark Soley, PhD, Chairman and CEO, Object Management Group; Executive Director, Industrial Internet Consortium *"This is a fascinating book on how we should rethink and manage product making in disruptive times. New perspectives, fresh concepts, unexpected ideas abound. A must-read for any leader and manager in product companies." * Pascal Daloz, Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Corporate Strategy Officer, Dassault Systèmes *Table of Contents Chapter - 00: Introduction; Section - ONE: Enter the new – Smart connected products for the digital age; Chapter - 01: The digital transformation of product making – Happening faster than you think!; Chapter - 02: Trends driving the case for product reinvention; Section - TWO: The digital reinvention of the product; Chapter - 03: A radically new kind of product – Adaptive | collaborative | proactive | responsible; Chapter - 04: Big shift one – From features to experience; Chapter - 05: Big shift two – From hardware to ‘as a service’; Chapter - 06: Big shift three – From product to platform; Chapter - 07: Big shift four – From mechatronics to artificial intelligence (AI); Chapter - 08: Big shift five – From linear to agile engineering in the New; Section - THREE: The journey to the reinvented product; Chapter - 09: Seven pivotal capabilities for managing the reinvention of the product; Chapter - 10: The roadmap to success with living products and services; Chapter - 11: Insights from the field; Chapter - 12: Reinvented products in action; Section - FOUR: Future product realities; Chapter - 13: Outlook 2030 – How the reinvented product governs our lives – a crowd-sourced story of innovation in five takes

    £20.69

  • On Capitalism

    Stanford University Press On Capitalism

    Book SynopsisThis important interdisciplinary work suggests a number of economic as well as sociological reasons why modern capitalism is such a uniquely dynamic force.Trade Review"This book offers illuminating analyses of the incentive mechanism that underlies the unprecedented growth performance of capitalism. It offers new insights into seminal contributions—like those of Weber and de Tocqueville–and contains much fascinating and valuable material that sociologists and economists will to well to absorb." —William J. Baumol, New York University"Nee and Swedberg have brought together an incredibly diverse and distinguished group of sociologists, economists, and political scientists to give Weber his due and show that his intellectual concerns are alive and well. Offering a terrifically wide range of topics—including religion and capitalism, law and the state in issues of development, and the role of social interaction in understanding corruption and the collective dynamics of market actors—many of these essays are gems." —Neil Fligstein, University of California, Berkeley"On Capitalism offers a refreshingly diverse range of insights into economic growth through its Weberian focus on non-economic factors such as ideas, institutions, culture, and religion.You may not agree with every essay in the volume, but you will learn a great deal by engaging these original and often unconventional perspectives. I recommend the volume to anyone interested in the spirit of contemporary capitalism." —AnnaLee Saxenian, University of California, BerkeleyTable of Contents[Table of Contents] Contents List of Tables List of Figures Acknowledgments Contributors Introduction Victor Nee and Richard Swedberg Part I: The Dynamics and Contradictions of Capitalism 1. The Systemic Anticulture of Capitalism Russell Hardin 2. Tocqueville and the Spirit of American Capitalism Richard Swedberg 3. Income Inequality and the Protestant Ethic Robert H. Frank Part II: Politics, Legal-Rational Institutions, and Corruption 4. On Politicized Capitalism Victor Nee and Sonja Opper 5. Law, Economy, and Globalization: Max Weber and How International Financial Institutions Understand Law Bruce G. Carruthers and Terence C. Halliday 6. The Social Construction of Corruption Mark Granovetter Part III: Religion 7. The Role of Spiritual Capital in Economic Behavior Barnaby Marsh 8. Political Economy and Religion in the Spirit of Max Weber Robert J. Barro and Rachel M. McCleary 9. Beyond Weber Michael Novak Part IV: Methodological and Conceptual Issues 10. The Collective Dynamics of Belief Duncan J. Watts 11. Analytical Individualism and the Explanation of Macrosocial Change Ronald Jepperson and John W. Meyer 12. Bootstrapping Development: Rethinking the Role of Public Intervention in Promoting Growth Charles F. Sabel Index

    £22.49

  • SelfRegulation and Human Progress

    Stanford University Press SelfRegulation and Human Progress

    Book SynopsisMost of us are familiar with free-market competition: the idea that society and the economy benefit when people are left to self-regulate, testing new ideas in pursuit of profit. Less known is the fact that this theory arose after arguments for the scientific method and freedom of speech had gone mainstream-and that all three share a common basis. Proponents of self-regulation in the realm of free speech have argued that unhindered public expression causes true ideas to gain strength through scrutiny. Similarly, scientific inquiry has been regarded as a self-correcting system, one in which competing hypotheses are verified by multiple independent researchers. It was long thought that society was better left to organize itself through free markets as opposed to political institutions. But, over the twentieth century, we became less confident in the notion of a self-regulating socioeconomy. Evan Osborne traces the rise and fall of this once-popular concept. He argues that-as society beTrade Review"Osborne delivers a history of thought across a number of disciplines that proves to be useful and interesting. His argument and ability to connect disparate tidbits expanded my own knowledge a great deal." -- Gary Wolfram * Hillsdale College *"In a fundamental sense, this book is original and very stimulating. Drawing on history, it presents the idea of a self-regulating society. As it explains how and why we have lost faith in this approach, it also extolls its virtues." -- Peter J. Boettke * George Mason University *"The error-correcting mechanisms of self-regulation discussed in the book complement much of the literature on bottom-up processes and self-governing systems....Self-Regulation and Human Progress will appeal to readers interested in the concepts of political and self-regulation, as well as the historical development of these ideas and their foundations." -- Liya Palagashvili * Public Choice *"Thomas Sowell likes to point out that people who have 'cosmic visions' usually can't be bothered to contemplate the world as it actually exists, with marginal gains and losses; Osborne's book makes that clear to anyone with an open mind. Self-regulation does not result in utopia, but it does far more to promote progress than does reliance on political regulation." -- George Leef * Regulation *Table of ContentsContents and Abstracts1Problems and Responses chapter abstractSocial systems can always function better than they do at a particular moment. Whether there is a need to return to normal after an unexpected disruption or to try to permanently improve the system's performance, there is a never-ending set of problems to address. This book describes the contrast between addressing such problems from outside that system through politics and allowing the participants in that system to self-regulate without external guidance of this kind. This chapter introduces this problem and these two contrasting approaches to it, and defines some terms that are frequently used in the book. 2Getting There: The Long Road to Self-Regulation chapter abstractAlmost as long there has been a human species, we have formed societies based on the principle of political regulation. There is a small cadre of leaders often assumed to have the right to order the lives of other members of society, supported by a current monopoly of armaments. While not universal, this pattern has been the norm since the agricultural revolution. In particular, it is argued that the idea of continuous social improvement was hardly known in ancient civilizations. Only in the late Renaissance did a pattern of thought evolve that indicated that it is better to see the pattern and outcomes of human social systems as progressing, with such systems capable under certain circumstances of regulating themselves to better effect than outsiders could hope to regulate them. 3Wrongs Make Rights: Self-Regulating Science chapter abstractBeginning in the 1600s, primarily in Britain, the Dutch Territories, and France, people not only tried to think about how the world worked (a pattern of thought as old as human civilization); they also agreed that there was much that was yet unknown and collectively built procedures for how to know more. The construction of the system for defining such knowledge and evaluating claims to be adding to it has been a gradual evolution that continues to this day. Among the landmark events discussed are the development of the ideas of hypotheses, the experimental method, free competition among scientific ideas, the use of the (growing number of) mathematical tools to arbitrate scientific claims, the development of modern research universities, the establishment and improvement of the peer review system, and the more recent addition of techniques beyond traditional scientific experiments as ways of supporting or falsifying scientific claims. 4The Less Unsaid the Better: Self-Regulating Free Speech chapter abstractThe question of how much free expression to tolerate hardly came up until the modern era. The creation in Europe of the printing press changed that and made expression a threat to long-standing social institutions. The nature of the new technology made it impossible to fully control the flow of books, pamphlets, and other printed material, but European governments tried. The argument in favor of a free press ultimately emerged, and the practice itself was institutionalized, mostly in Great Britain and northwestern Europe. The chapter emphasizes the self-regulating argument for free communication, that ideas beyond science would be improved if they must be subject to readers' scrutiny. Particular attention is paid to Milton, Struensee and John Stuart Mill. The arguments made in favor of the broad protection of freedom of speech that prevail in much of the world are shown to have significant self-regulating components. 5A Better Way Forward: Self-Regulating Socioeconomics chapter abstractThere is a long history of condemning merchants as agents of social disorder and little advocacy of free commerce as essential to ensure the proper allocation of efforts across economic activities and promote socioeconomic improvements. This began to change with both Aquinas and thinkers in the late Renaissance in Spain asking different questions about how producers could be induced to provide goods in a way that benefits society. The contributions of Bernard Mandeville, Anne Robert Jacques Turgot and, Adam Smith are sketched. By the end of the nineteenth century, much of the general public and even political leaders in Europe and North America believed in the virtues of the self-regulating socioeconomy. Through colonialism and observation of the "modern" West's seemingly obvious successes, people and societies around the world began in ever-larger numbers to believe as well. But such widespread confidence was not to last. 6Realignment: Fine Tuning in Light of Self-Regulation's Deficiencies chapter abstractThe later nineteenth and early twentieth centuries witnessed arguments from social reformers and artists and economists that the new, spontaneously evolving society was deficient. It worsened poverty, and it impoverished the soul. The tool of political regulation, exercised in the growing political power of the emerging organization known as the nation, was called in to polish the rough edges of the self-regulating society. As time went on, political regulation gradually came to be seen as the default, and self-regulation needed to be justified. The chapter particularly emphasizes the growth in such thinking among socialists and progressives in the United States and Western Europe. The catastrophe of the Great Depression, combined with admiration for a Soviet Union, Italy, and Germany, where political regulators said they were rationally designing a better society, meant that by the onset of World War II, this presumption was firmly in place throughout the West. 7Rebuilding: Systemic Changes to Counter Self-Regulation's Flaws chapter abstractHere the analysis turns to questioning the very premises that underlie the virtues of self-regulating social systems. Macro-objections agree that individuals cannot be assumed to be able to do what is best. It is the job of political regulators to take over and facilitate the development of society. Marxist theory in particular viewed history as unfolding inevitably, and so appalling cruelties were inflicted by Marxist governments to steer the revolution forward. The eugenics revolution categorized entire groups of people as genetically inferior, frequently because of their ethnicity. Politics was used in various countries to improve society by reducing births among inferior types. Micro-objections to self-regulation described individuals as incapable of being incented to choose what self-regulation requires. In either case, it is the essential task of political regulators to replace, if not destroy, the outcomes of the choices made under self-regulation. 8Assessing the Decline of Confidence in Self-Regulation chapter abstractThis chapter uses the new Google nGrams database to track the rise and fall of different English-language phrases in order to illustrate the corresponding rise and fall in confidence in self-regulation. After briefly introducing evidence on the rise in the extent of political regulation over the last century or so, documentation is presented on the parallel rise in skepticism of the self-regulating socioeconomy and self-regulating science generally, and in skepticism of the cognitive capacity of individuals to make socially productive choices in particular. 9The Best Way(s) Forward chapter abstractThere is good reason to be skeptical of the assumption that political regulation operates with the public interest in mind. Scientific productivity has continued to advance in the past half-century, as has the value and quantity of human expression. The argument in favor of socioeconomic self-regulation is identical to that for the other two systems. Yet recent scholarship suggests declining rates of economic growth in the wealthiest countries most subject to increasing political regulation during this period, while greater reliance on self-regulating economic forces has resulted in dramatic improvement of socioeconomies in the developing world. As political regulation of human expression has declined, literary, artistic, and philosophical achievement have expanded. Guidance is offered for how people should understand social change in their role as citizens and how they should conduct themselves in a world full of short-term instability but tremendous long-term progress.

    £56.10

  • New Age Capitalism

    University of Pennsylvania Press New Age Capitalism

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisNew Age Capitalism examines how Eastern and other non-Western traditions have been coopted by Western capitalism.Trade Review"New Age Capitalism reveals the sometimes hilarious ironies and contradictions that come with using the capitalist marketplace as a place to critique capitalism." * Joseph Turow, author of Breaking Up America: Advertisers and the New Media World *"New Age Capitalism represents a new, sophisticated-and in many ways daring-extension of folkloric concerns into the arena where ancient traditions, fads, popular culture, global economics, personal taste, and cultural worldview intersect. . . . Lau's compact book is a clever and helpful contribution to this enterprise." * Western Folklore *

    1 in stock

    £21.59

  • What Caused the Financial Crisis

    University of Pennsylvania Press What Caused the Financial Crisis

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisFeaturing essays by Nobel laureate economists and an afterword by Richard Posner, this volume provides a comprehensive overview of the collapse of the global financial sector in 2008. It will be essential reading for anyone interested in the nature of modern capitalism and regulation.Trade Review"You will find in this collection some of the best efforts so far to understand the financial crisis." * Edmund Phelps, Columbia University *Table of ContentsList of Illustrations 1. Capitalism and the Crisis: Bankers, Bonuses, Ideology, and Ignorance —Jeffrey Friedman PART I. THE CRISIS IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE 2. An Accident Waiting to Happen: Securities Regulation and Financial Deregulation —Amar Bhide 3. Monetary Policy, Credit Extension, and Housing Bubbles, 2008 and 1929 —Steven Gjerstad and Vernon L. Smith PART II. WHAT WENT WRONG (AND WHAT DIDN'T)? 4. The Anatomy of a Murder: Who Killed the American Economy? —Joseph E. Stiglitz 5. Monetary Policy, Economic Policy, and the Financial Crisis: An Empirical Analysis of What Went Wrong —John B. Taylor 6. Housing Initiatives and Other Policy Factors —Peter J. Wallison 7. How Securitization Concentrated Risk in the Financial Sector —Viral V. Acharya and Matthew Richardson 8. A Regulated Meltdown: The Basel Rules and Banks' Leverage —Juliusz Jablecki and Mateusz Machaj 9. The Credit-Rating Agencies and the Subprime Debacle —Lawrence J. White 10. Credit-Default Swaps and the Crisis Peter J. Wallison PART III. ECONOMISTS, ECONOMICS, AND THE FINANCIAL CRISIS 11. The Crisis of 2008: Lessons for and from Economics —Daron Acemoglu 12. The Financial Crisis and the Systemic Failure of the Economics Profession —David Colander, Michael Goldberg, Armin Haas, Katarina Juselius, Alan Kirman, Thomas Lux, and Brigitte Sloth Afterword: The Causes of the Financial Crisis —Richard A. Posner List of Abbreviations and Acronyms Notes References List of Contributors Index Acknowledgments

    2 in stock

    £28.80

  • The Rise of Fiduciary Capitalism

    University of Pennsylvania Press The Rise of Fiduciary Capitalism

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisTraces the rise of public and private pension funds, which now control as much as 50 percent of the equity in American corporations, and argues that shareholders in those funds could use their power to make corporations more responsive to social needs.Trade Review"The book is heartily recommended, particularly to pension fund managers and trustees and to corporate observers in general." * Enterprise and Society *

    1 in stock

    £56.10

  • Capitalisms Hidden Worlds

    University of Pennsylvania Press Capitalisms Hidden Worlds

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisTrade Review"This is an insightful, thought provoking ensemble of essays that explore the hidden economic forces, agents, and practices in the 19th and 20th century....Capitalist’s Hidden World is a stimulating, insightful collection of much needed empirical studies concerning the shadow economy of the modern world. It contains a number of contributions that offer new perspectives, especially in the fields of global history and discussions on marginalized groups...[I]t is bound to make a big impact in the fields of social and economic history." -- Paul Franke * Comparativ *"Capitalism's Hidden Worlds is a welcome contribution to the study of the history of capitalism. Capturing a wide range of topics-many illustrating the interpenetration of social, political, and regulatory regimes-and geography, the collection pushes the history of capitalism beyond its U.S.-centered focus." * Josh Lauer, University of New Hampshire *"In collecting essays that explore historical examples of economic activity overlooked, concealed, or misunderstood, editors Kenneth Lipartito and Lisa Jacobson encourage us to rethink our understanding of how markets have worked historically and how we conceptualize capitalism more generally." * James Taylor, Lancaster University *Table of ContentsPreface Roger Horowitz Introduction: Mapping the Shadowlands of Capitalism Kenneth Lipartito and Lisa Jacobson Part I. Measuring and Unveiling Markets Chapter 1. Lifting the Veil of Money: What Economic Indicators Hide Eli Cook Chapter 2. Accounting for Reproductive Labor: Feminist Economists and the Construction of Social Knowledge on Rural Women in the Global South Eileen Boris Part II. Working the Margins Chapter 3. The Loose Cotton Economy of the New Orleans Waterfront in the Late Nineteenth Century Bruce E. Baker Chapter 4. Jim Crow's Cut: White Supremacy and the Destruction of Black Capital in the Forests of the Deep South Owen James Hyman Chapter 5. In the Shadow of Incorporation: Hidden Economies of the Hispano Borderlands, 1890-1930 Bryan W. Turo Part III. The Licit and the Illicit Chapter 6. Capitalism's Back Pages: "Immoral" Advertising and Invisible Markets in Paris's Mass Press, 1880-1940 Hannah Frydman Chapter 7. Capitalism's Black Heart in Wartime France Kenneth Mouré Chapter 8. The Emergence of the Offshore Economy, 1914-1939 James Hollis and Christopher McKenna Part IV. Hidden Market Spaces in Planned Economies Chapter 9. Comrades In-Between: Transforming Commercial Practice in the People's Republic of China, 1949-1962 Philip Scranton Chapter 10. Hidden Realms of Private Entrepreneurship: Soviet Jews and Post-World War II Artels in the USSR Anna Kushkova Notes List of Contributors Index Acknowledgments

    10 in stock

    £45.00

  • John Wiley & Sons Financial Transition in Europe and Central Asia Challenges of the New Decade

    1 in stock

    a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.

    1 in stock

    £18.00

  • Distortions to Agricultural Incentives in Europes

    MP-WBK World Bank Group Publ Distortions to Agricultural Incentives in Europes

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisOffers an overview of the evolution of distortions to agricultural incentives caused by price and trade policies in the economies of Eastern Europe and Central Asia (ECA) that are transitioning away from central planning.

    1 in stock

    £30.56

  • The Politics of Culture in the Shadow of Capital

    Duke University Press The Politics of Culture in the Shadow of Capital

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisGlobal in scope, but refusing a familiar totalising theoretical framework, this title demonstrates how localised and resistant social practices - including anti-colonial and feminist struggles, peasant revolts, labour organising, and various cultural movements - challenge contemporary capitalism as a highly differentiated mode of production.Trade Review“Lowe and Lloyd bring together studies on contemporary histories and cultures from all over the world to show where and how they defy or escape prevailing theories, whether liberal, Marxist, or postmodern. The emphasis on the diverse and the singular is a welcome corrective to the globalizing pretensions of much recent theorization.”—Partha Chatterjee, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta"This powerful collection renders a most difficult and welcome service: it makes clear the means by which particular culturally-situated struggles remake ‘the global.’ It shows us that the terrain on which economic and political contradictions are fought is culture; that antiracist and feminist struggles remake our understanding of materialist analysis; and that traversing the globe demands theoretical transportation in multiple directions."—Wahneema Lubiano, Duke University

    1 in stock

    £30.40

  • Millennial Capitalism and the Culture of

    Duke University Press Millennial Capitalism and the Culture of

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisHow are we to understand capitalism at the millennium? Is it a singular or polythetic creature? What are we to make of the culture of neoliberalism that appears to accompany it, taking on simultaneously local and translocal forms? This title deals with these questions.Trade Review“In an extrarodinary introduction the editors of this book set out to interrogate the features of capitalism at the millennium, not only its technical but also its messianic and magical manifestations. This makes for an unusual treatment of familiar subjects. . . . [M]ust reading for anyone concerned with transnational processes.”—Saskia Sassen, author of The Global City“The savvy success of ‘postmodernism,’ that cynical sign of the fin de siecle, has prevented us from re-imagining the present and mapping the future. Millennial Capitalism and the Culture of Neoliberalism steps into the breach and opens up a new chapter in our understanding of a world of contradictory forces and ambivalent affiliations. When the rapid expansion of free markets sends sovereign states into free fall, and the value of citizenship is measured in the currency of consumption, the time is ripe for a radical rethinking of political passion in the public interest. In a fine double act the Comaroffs, and their gifted contributors, provide us with brilliant ethnographic and ethical accounts of a world-system whose emergent structures are both older and newer than the globalizing jargon of our times.”—Homi K. Bhabha, University of ChicagoTable of ContentsMillennial Capitalism: First Thoughts on a Second Coming / John L. Comaroff and Jean Comaroff Millennial Transitions / Irene Stengs, Hylton White, Caitrin Lynch, and Jeffrey A. Zimmermann Towards a Critique of Globalcentrism: Speculations on Capitalism’s Nature / Fernando Coronil Lived Effects of the Contemporary Economy: Globalization, Inequality, and Consumer Society / Michael Storper The Dialectics of Still Life: Murder, Women, and Maquiladoreas / Melissa W. Wright Freeway to China (Version 2, for Liverpool) / Allan Sekula Capitalism and Autochthony: The Seesaw of Mobility and Belonging / Peter Geschiere and Francis Myamnjoh Millennial Coal Face / Luiz Paulo Lima, Scott Bradwell, and Seamus Walsh Modernity’s Media and the End of Mediumship? On the Aesthetic Economy of Transparency in Thailand / Rosalind C. Morris Living at the Edge: Religion, Capitalism, and the End of the Nation-State in Taiwan / Robert P. Weller Millenniums Past, Cuba’s Future? / Paul Ryer Consuming Geist: Popontology and the Spirit of Capital in Indigenous Australia / Elizabeth A. Povinelli Cosmopolitanism and the Banality of Geographical Evils / David Harvey Contributors Index

    2 in stock

    £28.80

  • Modelling the Composition of Government

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Modelling the Composition of Government

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe composition of government expenditure varies considerably across countries. The aim of this book is to explore the choice of expenditure using a range of modelling approaches.Trade Review‘. . . this book provides very useful groundwork for modelling the composition of government spending. Scholars with a desire to explore and explain the future of public finances will find this a helpful launching pad.’ -- Cameron A. Shelton, Jahrbucher fur Nationalokonomie und StatistikTable of ContentsContents: Part I: Introduction 1. Introduction 2. Alternative Choice Mechanisms Part II: Voting Models 3. Transfer Payments and Public Goods 4. The Role of Home Production 5. An Overlapping Generations Framework Part III: Optimal Choice 6. The Optimal Expenditure Composition 7. Education, Public Goods and Transfers 8. The Overlapping Generations Context Part IV: A General Equilibrium Model 9. A General Equilibrium OLG Model Bibliography Index

    2 in stock

    £94.00

  • The Great Recession and the Contradictions of

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd The Great Recession and the Contradictions of

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe Great Recession has punctuated the long history of capitalism and is a necessary outcome of contemporary capitalism’s great contradictions, both in its Anglo-Saxon configuration and European neo-mercantilism posture.Trade Review‘The Great Recession and the Contradictions of Contemporary Capitalism is a critically important contribution and a strongly recommended addition to the academic library economics reference collections and supplemental studies reading lists’ -- The Midwest Book Review‘This book makes a difference compared with the mass of existing crisis literature. Exploring a variety of heterodox approaches, it clearly discusses the important issues behind the well known facts: the dynamics of capitalism leading to the current crisis, the character of the crisis as mainly financial or as a result of changing conditions in production and consumption, the “rationality” of money, credit and debt, and the gender perspective of the crisis. Here you can find interesting alternatives to sterile mainstream discussions.’ -- Michael Heinrich, University of Technology and Economics, Germany‘An excellent assemblage of scholarly thought on the current economic mess in Europe and America. Drawing on a range of left traditions in political economy, from Marx to Keynes to Minsky, the authors offer original takes on crisis theory, financial fragility and austerity. The book’s great strength is the depth of analysis of money, debt and speculation, and how they are implicated in the malfunctioning of contemporary capitalism. A salutatory challenge to the aridity of so much of conventional economics.’ -- Richard A. Walker, University of California, US‘The Great Recession has shaken up the economics profession, underscoring the urgency of developing new and innovative ways of understanding the changes in the global economy. This excellent and thoughtful volume offers a series of heterodox analyses that will do just that. It will prove valuable to economists ready to question neoclassical and even Keynesian assumptions about how macroeconomies function in order to develop more relevant models and policies that fit our current system.’ -- Stephanie Seguino, University of Vermont, USTable of ContentsContents: Introduction Riccardo Bellofiore and Giovanna Vertova 1. The Great Recession and the Contradictions of Contemporary Capitalism Riccardo Bellofiore 2. The Crisis of the Early 21st Century: Marxian Perspective Gérard Duménil and Dominique Lévy 3. Marx, Keynes and Hayek and the Great Recession of 2008 Meghnad Desai 4. Fictitious Capital in the Context of Global Over-accumulation and Changing International Economic Power Relationship François Chesnais 5. Conventions and Disruptions Christian Marazzi 6. Debt, Class and Asset Inflation Jan Toporowski 7. Speculation, Financial Fragility and Stock-flow Consistency Jo Michell 8. A Structural Monetary Reform to Reduce Global Imbalances: Keynes’ Plan Revisited to Avert International Payment Deficits Sergio Rossi 9. The True Rules of a Good Management of Public Finance. An Implication of the Fatal Euro-zone Crisis. Alain Parguez 10. Growth and Crisis in the Italian Economy Vittorio Valli 11. What’s Gender got to do with the Great Recession? The Italian Case. Giovanna Vertova 12. Financial and Nuclear Meltdowns: the Fragility of Chain-reaction Critical Processes Alessandro Vercelli Index

    1 in stock

    £100.00

  • Evolution of the Hungarian Economy 18481998

    East European Monographs Evolution of the Hungarian Economy 18481998

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisKornai presents an assessment of Hungary's transition from a socialist to a market economy. In a comprehensive critique of socialist economy reform, Kornai explains how the system's ideological and political attributes deny the idea of "market socialism."

    1 in stock

    £28.80

  • After the Washington Consensus  Restarting Growth

    The Peterson Institute for International Economics After the Washington Consensus Restarting Growth

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    1 in stock

    £22.50

  • Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd A Research Agenda for PublicâPrivate Partnerships

    Book SynopsisTrade Review‘Public–private partnerships have been a major development in public sector reform around the world in recent decades – but their role remains hotly contested. In this book, Carsten Greve and Graeme Hodge, as major contributors to the field, bring together leading scholars to provide an in-depth survey of current research into PPPs and key avenues for future research. With its outstanding analytical depth and comprehensive range of topics, it offers an indispensable guide for both researchers and government policymakers.’ -- Tony Bovaird, University of Birmingham, UK‘The world of PPPs and infrastructure governance is perilously complex, but this must-read book is the key to unlock the evolution of and momentum behind the global research agenda. Reading the individual contributions, I felt thrilled, impressed and humbled. Thrilled about the quality and diversity of research from long-established and newer authors. Impressed by the combination of fine eyes for detail and the identification of overarching themes, all explained in reader-friendly language. Humbled by the multitude of research challenges that remain.’ -- Professor Emerita Pam Stapleton, The University of Manchester, UK‘This edited volume makes a major contribution to the literature on public–private partnerships (P3s). Utilizing both cross-national and interdisciplinary approaches, the book assesses the current state of P3 research and suggests new avenues for future enquiry.’ -- Lawrence Martin, University of Central Florida, US‘This volume is an invaluable resource for scholars interested in public–private partnerships in infrastructure. Drawing on a broad range of disciplinary perspectives, it explains what we have already learned about partnerships, and identifies the critical questions that remain to be answered. All of this is done in a crisp and accessible style.’ -- Alasdair Roberts, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, USTable of ContentsContents: Preface and acknowledgements xiii PART I INTRODUCTION 1 The PPP research terrain in a contested era 3 Carsten Greve and Graeme A. Hodge 2 Theories of public–private partnerships 35 Erik-Hans Klijn 3 The use of research methods in public–private partnership research 55 Rianne Warsen PART II NEW FRONTIERS IN A CONTESTED WORLD 4 Public–private partnerships in an economist’s eye: a gleam or a beam? 85 Dmitri Vinogradov and Elena Shadrina 5 New frontiers in the politics of public–private partnerships 105 Anthony M. Bertelli and Eleanor F. Woodhouse 6 Psychological and ontological research on PPPs: what is PPP doing to us? 117 Sophie Sturup 7 What can behavioural science teach us about the policy settings for privately financed public infrastructure? 131 Sebastian Zwalf 8 A public turn in the governance of infrastructure 151 Lene Tolstrup Christensen and Carsten Greve 9 New frontiers in planning: city building through public–private partnerships? 163 Matti Siemiatycki 10 New frontiers of PPP law 179 Christina Tvarnø and Sarah Maria Denta PART III CONTEMPORARY AND CONTINUING THEMES IN A CONTESTED WORLD 11 Financialization: the next stage in PPP development 205 Anne Stafford, Stewart Smyth and Marta Almeida 12 Great expectations for pension funds: a tale of two cities 229 Richard Foster and Graeme A. Hodge 13 The public–private partnership market maturity research frontier 261 Carter B. Casady 14 The determinants of PPP uptake in Europe: a mixed methods approach 277 Moritz Liebe 15 Institutional work in policy transfers: a case study of PPP adoption in Germany 305 Micaela Mihov 16 High speed, high cost: the problematic procurement of Ireland’s National Broadband Plan 331 Dónal Palcic and Eoin Reeves PART IV CONCLUSION 17 Common themes for a PPP research agenda 353 Graeme A. Hodge and Carsten Greve Index

    £38.90

  • £223.25

  • £80.75

  • The End of Work

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd The End of Work

    Book SynopsisSurveys twentieth century theologies of work, contrasting differing approaches to consider the problem of labor from a theological perspective. Aimed at theologians concerned with how Christianity might engage in social criticism, as well those who are interested in the connection between Marxist and Christian traditions Explores debates about labor under capitalism and considers the relationship between divine and human work Through a thorough reading of Weber's Protestant Work Ethic, argues that the triumph of the spirit of utility is crucial to understanding modern notions of work Draws on the work of various twentieth century Catholic thinkers, including Josef Pieper, Jacques Maritain, Eric Gill, and David Jones Published in the new and prestigious Illuminations series. Trade Review"These two excellent books provide thematic indices of Christian ways of understanding both power and work. They also illustrate how profoundly the repertoire of Christianity and of its Judaic origins permeates contemporary society in spite of the impossible prescriptions and false descriptions that declare religion confined to the private realm." (Times Literary Supplement, 29 July 2011) "Adam was expelled from the garden of Eden to till the ground in the sweat of his face, so the bible says, leaving us with centuries of theological argument about how to relate the reality for so many people of work as toil, drudgery and effectively a curse, to the equally familiar experience of work as creative achievement and personal fulfilment. Post-Christian we may now be in Britain, yet in a society still reeling from de-industrialization, with unemployment endemic in certain quarters, with leisure activities expanding vastly, and so on, there is a rich and complex Christian tradition of thinking about the nature of work which John Hughes puts back on the agenda in this provocative book." Fergus Kerr, University of Oxford "John Hughes has written not about work but about the 'end' of work. But this is the most far-reaching question imaginable in practical reason. To what end do we exert ourselves at all? What do we hope to achieve? Through a tour of reading in nineteenth and twentieth century thinkers that is as subtle and sympathetic as it is diverse and adventurous he has shown us how the ancient struggle between the fine and the useful has been played out dramatically in the post-industrial West, and holds the key to a great deal that we think of as modernity. Here is an exciting new voice contributing to the interpretation of our moral predicaments. I cannot imagine anyone putting Hughes’ book down without having learned something important." Oliver O'Donovan, University of Edinburgh "Its strength lies in its illuminating discussions of a fairly wide range of writers." Times Higher Education Supplement Table of ContentsForeword. Preface. Introduction: Work in the Christian Tradition. 1. Twentieth-century Theologies of Work: Karl Barth, Marie-Dominique Chenu, John Paul II and Miroslav Volf. 2. Utility as the Spirit of Capitalism: Max Weber’s Diagnosis of Modern Work. 3. Labour, Excess and Utility in Karl Marx: The Problem of Materialism and the Aesthetic. 4. John Ruskin and William Morris: An Alternative Tradition: Labor and the Theo-aesthetic in English Romantic Critiques of Capitalism. 5. The Frankfurt School: The Critique of Instrumental Reason and Hints of Return to the Theo-aesthetic within Marxism. 6. The end of Work: Rest, Beauty and Liturgy: The Catholic Metaphysical Critique of the Culture of Work and its Incorporation into the English Romantic Tradition: Josef Pieper, Jacques Maritain, Eric Gill and David Jones. 7. Concluding Remarks: Labor, Utility and Theology. Bibliography. Index

    £37.95

  • Social Policy in Times of Austerity

    Bristol University Press Social Policy in Times of Austerity

    Book SynopsisThe 2008 global economic crisis has led to a new age of austerity, based more on politics than economics, which threatens to undermine the very foundations of the welfare state. However, as resistance to the logic of austerity grows, this important book argues that there is still room for optimism.Trade Review"[The editors] are tackling an important agenda when they bring together a range of contributions on different aspects of the idea and practice of austerity." Citizen's Income Newsletter"This is sure to be an influential book on the contemporary literature on the politics of austerity. Featuring insightful contributions by some of the foremost theorists in social policy, the book offers a remarkably powerful analysis of governments’ recent overhauls of social policies.” Dr Lavinia Mitton, University of Kent"A timely, thought-provoking collection of critical scholarship which helps to better understand the ideology, politics and economics of austerity in contemporary welfare states and presents the reader with alternatives to the standard policy prescriptions of today." Professor Peter Starke, University of Southern DenmarkTable of ContentsIntroduction: social policy in the age of austerity ~ Kevin Farnsworth and Zoë Irving; Austerity: more than the sum of its parts ~ Kevin Farnsworth and Zoë Irving; Conventional wisdom on government austerity: UK politics since the 1920s ~ Michael Hill;
 The economics of austerity ~ Stephen Mcbride; Neoliberalism, finance-dominated accumulation and enduring austerity: a cultural political economy perspective ~ Bob Jessop;
 Alternatives to austerity ~ Dexter Whitfield and John Spoehr; Crisis, convulsion and the welfare state ~ Frances Fox-Piven and Lorraine Minnite; Conclusion: a new politics of welfare ~ Kevin Farnsworth and Zoë Irving.

    £75.99

  • Social Policy in Times of Austerity

    Policy Press Social Policy in Times of Austerity

    Book SynopsisThe 2008 global economic crisis has led to a new age of austerity, based more on politics than economics, which threatens to undermine the very foundations of the welfare state. However, as resistance to the logic of austerity grows, this important book argues that there is still room for optimism.Trade Review"[The editors] are tackling an important agenda when they bring together a range of contributions on different aspects of the idea and practice of austerity." Citizen's Income Newsletter"This is sure to be an influential book on the contemporary literature on the politics of austerity. Featuring insightful contributions by some of the foremost theorists in social policy, the book offers a remarkably powerful analysis of governments’ recent overhauls of social policies.” Dr Lavinia Mitton, University of Kent"A timely, thought-provoking collection of critical scholarship which helps to better understand the ideology, politics and economics of austerity in contemporary welfare states and presents the reader with alternatives to the standard policy prescriptions of today." Professor Peter Starke, University of Southern DenmarkTable of ContentsIntroduction: social policy in the age of austerity ~ Kevin Farnsworth and Zoë Irving; Austerity: more than the sum of its parts ~ Kevin Farnsworth and Zoë Irving; Conventional wisdom on government austerity: UK politics since the 1920s ~ Michael Hill;? The economics of austerity ~ Stephen Mcbride; Neoliberalism, finance-dominated accumulation and enduring austerity: a cultural political economy perspective ~ Bob Jessop;? Alternatives to austerity ~ Dexter Whitfield and John Spoehr; Crisis, convulsion and the welfare state ~ Frances Fox-Piven and Lorraine Minnite; Conclusion: a new politics of welfare ~ Kevin Farnsworth and Zoë Irving.

    £26.59

  • The Global Financial Crisis and Austerity

    Bristol University Press The Global Financial Crisis and Austerity

    Book SynopsisWritten by an expert in political science and straddling finance, economics and political science, this entry-level summary demystifies global finance and puts the financial crisis in its historical context. It also outlines the policy responses of Western governments to the crash and the ensuing recession and turn to austerity.Trade Review“As a simple-to-read introduction to and look back upon the financial crisis this is as good at it gets.” Professor Andrew Hindmoor, University of Sheffield, UK"David Clark has written an insightful introduction to the causes and consequences of the global financial crisis, to be welcomed both for its brevity and clarity" Dr Simon Lee, University of Hull, UK"This book is a `must read’ for anyone who wants a crash course on the global financial crisis and austerity. Written in a highly accessible manner, it uses academic experts’ insights to great effect to explain what happened and why." Professor Vivien A. Schmidt, Boston University, USA"Clark's political economy of the global financial crisis and its aftermaths is as clinical as it is accessible. It systematically demystifies and therefore empowers. This book deserves a wide readership." Professor Steve Tombs, The Open University, UK"We are still living in the shadow of the 2008 financial crash. David Clark provides an impressive overview of its causes and consequences, and how it has been interpreted." Professor Andrew Gamble, University of Cambridge, UK"Without deeper understanding of finance and economics, citizens cannot truly exercise their democratic agency. David Clark has met this challenge with a highly readable book that guides us through the complex landscape of the global financial crisis and its aftermath. Reading it is as much a democratic act as an educational one." Tony Greenham, Director, RSATable of ContentsIntroduction; Banking and shadow banking: an overview; From boom to bust and beyond; Putting the great financial crash in its place; Exploring the neoliberal heartland; Post-crash austerity; Finance-led capitalism at a crossroads?

    £13.38

  • Taxing Crime  A WholeofGovernment Approach to

    John Wiley & Sons Taxing Crime A WholeofGovernment Approach to

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe study supports policy makers in designing legal and operational frameworks and practices to enhance cooperation between tax authorities and Law Enforcement Agencies at the domestic and international levels, and to build on synergies between investigations and enforcement in the context of tax crimes, money laundering and corruption.

    1 in stock

    £33.26

  • Asphalt

    University of Nebraska Press Asphalt

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisAsphalt: A History demonstrates that roads, parking lots, and civilian and military runways constitute the central arteries of our environment. Kenneth O'Reilly argues that although asphalt creates our environment, it eventually threatens it.Trade Review“It turns out that the story of asphalt is closely linked to the story of modernity—the smooth ride of our cars across the pavement ties into everything from the climate crisis to the racism inherent in tearing up our central cities for highways. A fascinating story that will reshape your sense of what binds the world together.”—Bill McKibben, author of Falter: Has the Human Game Begun to Play Itself Out?“Kenneth O’Reilly’s wide-ranging story of seduction and threat is rich in iridescent detail and full of surprising twists.”—Graeme Wynn, past president of the American Society for Environmental History“Full of forceful characters from Nebuchadnezzar to the Koch brothers and ranging from the Dead Sea’s asphalt seeps to Alberta’s oil sands, this carefully researched book tells the story of one of the key substances shaping our world.”—J. R. McNeill, past president of the American Historical Association“Both a blessing and a curse, the progenitor of peace and the facilitator of violence, asphalt must be considered central to our understanding of modern history, and Kenneth O’Reilly convincingly explains why.”—Darren Dochuk, author of Anointed with Oil: How Christianity and Crude Made Modern America“As the best histories do, Asphalt uses the past to change our view of the present and, hopefully, the possibilities for our future. Read this book, step outside, and see our world anew.”—Paul Bogard, author of The Ground Beneath Us“O’Reilly chronicles how asphalt enabled suburbanization and urban decay, segregation, warfare, and environmental degradation. Brimming with a range of colorful characters, Asphalt takes us to the far corners of the world, in the process providing a fresh perspective on some of the central themes of modern global history.”—Sven Beckert, author of Empire of Cotton: A Global HistoryTable of ContentsPreface Introduction: Power, Culture, Space Part 1. Before Blacktop 1. Nature: Tar Pits and Asphalt Volcanoes 2. Use: Fired Bricks and Mummy Wars 3. Faith: Asphalt’s Dark Ages Part 2. Coming to America 4. Triumph: The Blacktop Dawn 5. Duty: Conquering Poverty and Mud, Reich and Rising Sun 6. Crusades: Asphalt in the Cold War 7. Angles: Terrorists, Tricksters, Tea Partiers 8. Overburden: The Oil-Sand Century Conclusion: The Other Black Hole Acknowledgments Notes Bibliography Index

    1 in stock

    £22.79

  • Revolutionizing World Trade: How Disruptive

    Stanford University Press Revolutionizing World Trade: How Disruptive

    Book SynopsisAlmost 15 years ago, in The World is Flat, Thomas Friedman popularized the latest wave of globalization as a world of giant corporate supply chains that tripled world trade between 1990 and 2010. Major corporations such as Apple, Dell, and GE offshored manufacturing to low-cost economies; China became the world's factory, mass-producing and exporting computers and gadgets to Western shoppers. This paradigm of globalization has dominated global trade policy-making and guided hundreds of billions of dollars in business investments and development spending for almost three decades. But we are now on the cusp of a new era. Revolutionizing World Trade argues that technologies such as ecommerce, 3D printing, 5G, the Cloud, blockchain, and artificial intelligence are revolutionizing the economics of trade and global production, empowering businesses of all sizes to make, move, and market products and services worldwide and with greater ease than ever before. The twin forces of digitization and trade are changing the patterns, players, politics, and possibilities of world trade, and can reinvigorate global productivity growth. However, new policy challenges and old regulatory frameworks are stifling the promise of this most dynamic, prosperous, and inclusive wave of globalization yet. This book uses new empirical evidence and policy experiences to examine the clash between emerging possibilities in world trade and outdated policies and institutions, offering several policy recommendations for navigating these obstacles to catalyze growth and development around the world.Trade Review"Trade has historically been expensive, slow, and opaque. Today's disruptive technologies not only offer new solutions to old problems, but create wholly new global markets for products and services. Kati Suominen draws from her deep experience in the world of goods trade to clearly set out the parameters of this new global trading ecosystem, offering excellent insight and advice for goods producers seeking to get involved in frontier technologies like blockchain and AI."—Dr. Alisa DiCaprio, Head of Trade and Supply Chain, R3"Suominen brilliantly explores the impact of new technologies on the patterns, players, and possibilities of world trade, and their unparalleled potential to reignite productivity, raise incomes, and empower people. She then masterfully lays down a bold and innovative blueprint to help policymakers act on this potential. In an increasingly darkening global trade policy scenario, this is a book by a modern-day Renaissance woman on the renaissance of globalization!"—Anabel González, Nonresident Senior Fellow, Peterson Institute for International Economics, former Costa Rica Trade Minister, Senior Director of the World Bank Trade & Competitiveness, and former WTO Agriculture Director"An important new book, highlighting the trading opportunities that come with new technologies. It analyzes the challenges that need to be overcome, including cross-border procedures, and makes the key point that beyond digitizing trade, we also need to digitize customs, borders, and ports."—Jan Hoffmann, Chief, Trade Logistics Branch, Division on Technology and Logistics, UNCTAD"Professor Kati Suominen 'gets it.' Globalization, technology, and mass affluence have changed the rules for international expansion. In Revolutionizing World Trade, Suominen walks us through how these changes have upended the traditional trading world, driven by ecommerce and the Internet. Every international business should get this book. Then they can 'get it' as well."—Frank Lavin, Chairman, Export Now, former Undersecretary for International Trade, U.S. Department of Commerce"Revolutionizing World Trade provides an in-depth look at forces changing trade and global business and makes important recommendations for bold policy ideas which would enable outsized economic growth across global markets. A must-read for anyone driven to solve these big problems."—Brenda Santoro, Head of Global Trade, Silicon Valley Bank"Kati has a wealth of experience in international trade from both a private sector practitioner perspective as well as a public sector policy perspective. Her work has taken her to the forefront of the evolving trade landscape. This book elucidates this evolution and is a great contribution to the debate about the future of trade and our ability to shape its course for the betterment of the global community."—Steven Beck, Head of Trade and Supply Chain Finance, Asian Development Bank"Kati Suominen introduces this book as a roadmap for the far-sighted entrepreneur; however, it is much more than that. In Revolutionizing World Trade, she explores the opportunities and challenges facing businesses, policy makers, regulators, and society in general, before finally setting out her manifesto for using e-commerce as a key enabler for inclusive trade. Whatever your role or interest in e-commerce and trade, this book will help you better understand how e-commerce is shaping our world today and the benefits that it can bring tomorrow."—Steven Pope, Vice President Customs & Regulatory Affairs, DHL Express Europe"In a time of taking two steps back, Revolutionizing World Trade makes a bold leap into the future and the verdict is there is nothing to fear! Suominen provides a thorough review of what's to come for the global economy and while not shying from the real challenges facing consumers, governments and businesses, generates a sense of promise and optimism sorely missing from today's discourse on global affairs."—Susan F. Stone, Senior Trade Advisor, OECD"Suominen examines the opportunities that new technologies will open up in world trade, ushering in what she calls 'globalization 4.0' within a decade. This future is already apparent, in an incipient form."—Richard N. Cooper, Foreign Affairs"This [is a] lively, well-written book....Suominen is well versed in these issues, is at home as a policy wonk, and has all the right credentials (and she adds a welcome sense of humor and irreverence)....Highly recommended."—I. Walter, CHOICETable of Contents1. Introduction 2. World Economy Goes to Heaven 3. Killer App for World Trade 4. When Six Billion People Go to the Mall 5. Driverless Delivery, Door to Door 6. Finding $1.7 Trillion 7. The Big Query 8. Offline 9. Stuck in Customs 10. Splinternet 11. Credit Crunch 12. Techlash and Trade Wars 13. Better Trade By More People

    £107.20

  • Permanent Revolution: Reflections on Capitalism

    Stanford University Press Permanent Revolution: Reflections on Capitalism

    Book SynopsisPermanent Revolution concisely describes the development and workings of capitalism and its influence on the broader society. In the developed world—Europe, North America, and parts of East Asia—capitalism is ubiquitous, and as such, often taken for granted. Discussion usually focuses on specific aspects of the system that individuals appreciate or dislike, ignoring the larger picture. The notion of millennials denouncing capitalism on Facebook and Twitter—products of capitalist development—is a caricature that is eerily close to reality. In this book, Wyatt Wells examines the development of economic innovation, the role of financial markets, the business cycle, the ways markets operate, and the position of labor in capitalist economies, as well as the effects of capitalism on law, politics, religion, and even the arts. This discussion is grounded in history, though it does make use of economic theory. As a result, the book sometimes approaches topics from an unconventional direction. For instance, it notes that financial markets not only pool and allocate the resources of savers—the role ascribed to them in conventional economics textbooks—but they also discipline enterprises, punishing those unable to meet prescribed financial standards. Permanent Revolution ranges broadly, delving into how capitalism reshapes the broader society. The system creates wealth in new and, often, unexpected places, and it constantly moves people physically and socially. The result revolutionizes society. Traditional structures based on deference and long experience gradually collapse because they no longer correspond to social reality. Capitalist societies must devise ways to accommodate perpetual change in politics, religion, and society. Much of the diversity, liberty, and flexibility we associate with modern society are the product of capitalist development.Trade Review"A wonderful outline of how capitalism works and a spirited defense of its classical principles. This is a text of great use both to those who celebrate the achievements of capitalism and those who want to critique its basic tenets."—O.A. Westad, Elihu Professor of History and Global Affairs, Yale University"Wyatt Wells' Permanent Revolution is a brisk, lively, and thoroughly original anatomy of, and meditation on, capitalism. At a time when capitalism's future is increasingly being called into question, Wells offers a powerful but balanced defense of this economic system. Broadly conceived and well executed, this book constitutes an important and necessary contribution both to the scholarly literature and to contemporary debates."—Peter A. Coclanis, Albert R. Newsome Distinguished Professor of History and Director of the Global Research Institute, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill"This is a beautifully written small book about a very big subject: the origin and worldwide spread of dynamic, ever-changing free market economies. Wells celebrates the almost unbelievable material growth achieved by the role-governed competition of risk-taking, profit-seeking entrepreneurs. He evaluates the claims of anticapitalist critics, and explores the often conflicted interaction of economic systems and the broader social realm, including even religion and the arts."—Paul K. Conkin, Distinguished Professor of History, Vanderbilt University"Permanent Revolutionis a superb integrative discussion of capitalism that unites history and economics with its political, cultural, and sociological foundations. When academics typically confine themselves to an in-depth 'silo' of knowledge cut off from other domains, this form of integration is rare and welcome."—Raymond C. Niles, EH.net

    £13.94

  • Sugar Daddy Capitalism: The Dark Side of the New

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Sugar Daddy Capitalism: The Dark Side of the New

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisWhat is the connection between the sleaziness of Harvey Weinstein’s ‘business meetings’ and the passionless doctrine of neoclassical economics? In this witty and incisive examination of the new economy, Peter Fleming argues that they are closer than you might think. The quest to rid society of bureaucracy, shrink government and burn red tape has certainly made capitalism ‘more human’, but not in the family-friendly way envisaged by free-market gurus. Increasing informality has led to a capitalism fuelled by limitless exploitation and increasingly seedy methods of management, from semi-feudal workplace hazing rituals and predatory middle-managers with an axe to grind to arbitrary zero-hours contracts, Uber and, perhaps worst of all, the compulsory gym session with your boss. Fleming dubs this ‘Sugar Daddy Capitalism’ after the controversial dating-app wealthy businessmen use to meet young girls, most of whom are struggling with university fees. What seems like a creepy outlier is actually a prescient metaphor for our whole economy: an anonymous and impersonal cash system that is also intent on getting under your skin, extra close and capable of ruining everything if you say ... ‘no’.Trade Review"Sugar Daddy Capitalism is a sober, utterly convincing analysis of contemporary economies of all scales, and the encroachment of the market into every nook and cranny – literally – of our lives. This book won't make you happy, but it will make you angry."—Nina Power, University of Roehampton "Scary, poignant and hilarious – Sugar Daddy Capitalism confirms Peter Fleming's position as one of the most interesting social analysts writing today."—Carl Cederström, co-author of The Wellness SyndromeTable of Contents Contents Introduction: The Economics of Sleaze Chapter One: Uberfamiliar Chapter Two: Sugar Daddy Capitalism Chapter Three: Wiki-Feudalism Chapter Four: The Human ... All Too Human Workplace Chapter Five: No More Buddy Buddy Conclusion: Less Human

    15 in stock

    £45.00

  • Sugar Daddy Capitalism: The Dark Side of the New

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Sugar Daddy Capitalism: The Dark Side of the New

    Book SynopsisWhat is the connection between the sleaziness of Harvey Weinstein’s ‘business meetings’ and the passionless doctrine of neoclassical economics? In this witty and incisive examination of the new economy, Peter Fleming argues that they are closer than you might think. The quest to rid society of bureaucracy, shrink government and burn red tape has certainly made capitalism ‘more human’, but not in the family-friendly way envisaged by free-market gurus. Increasing informality has led to a capitalism fuelled by limitless exploitation and increasingly seedy methods of management, from semi-feudal workplace hazing rituals and predatory middle-managers with an axe to grind to arbitrary zero-hours contracts, Uber and, perhaps worst of all, the compulsory gym session with your boss. Fleming dubs this ‘Sugar Daddy Capitalism’ after the controversial dating-app wealthy businessmen use to meet young girls, most of whom are struggling with university fees. What seems like a creepy outlier is actually a prescient metaphor for our whole economy: an anonymous and impersonal cash system that is also intent on getting under your skin, extra close and capable of ruining everything if you say ... ‘no’.Trade Review"Sugar Daddy Capitalism is a sober, utterly convincing analysis of contemporary economies of all scales, and the encroachment of the market into every nook and cranny – literally – of our lives. This book won't make you happy, but it will make you angry."—Nina Power, University of Roehampton "Scary, poignant and hilarious – Sugar Daddy Capitalism confirms Peter Fleming's position as one of the most interesting social analysts writing today."—Carl Cederström, co-author of The Wellness SyndromeTable of Contents Contents Introduction: The Economics of Sleaze Chapter One: Uberfamiliar Chapter Two: Sugar Daddy Capitalism Chapter Three: Wiki-Feudalism Chapter Four: The Human ... All Too Human Workplace Chapter Five: No More Buddy Buddy Conclusion: Less Human

    £15.19

  • The Ungovernable Society: A Genealogy of

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd The Ungovernable Society: A Genealogy of

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisRebellion was in the air. Workers were on strike, students were demonstrating on campuses, discipline was breaking down. No relation of domination was left untouched – the relation between the sexes, the racial order, the hierarchies of class, relationships in families, workplaces and colleges. The upheavals of the late 1960s and early 1970s quickly spread through all sectors of social and economic life, threatening to make society ungovernable. This crisis was also the birthplace of the authoritarian liberalism which continues to cast its shadow across the world in which we now live. To ward off the threat, new arts of government were devised by elites in business-related circles, which included a war against the trade unions, the primacy of shareholder value and a dethroning of politics. The neoliberalism that thus began its triumphal march was not, however, determined by a simple ‘state phobia’ and a desire to free up the economy from government interference. On the contrary, the strategy for overcoming the crisis of governability consisted in an authoritarian liberalism in which the liberalization of society went hand-in-hand with new forms of power imposed from above: a ‘strong state’ for a ‘free economy’ became the new magic formula of our capitalist societies. The new arts of government devised by ruling elites are still with us today and we can understand their nature and lasting influence only by re-examining the history of the conflicts that brought them into being.Trade Review‘A comprehensive account, both historical and systematic, of how and why in the 1970s business began to perceive democratic capitalism as ungovernable, and what it tried to do about this: from corporate reform to strengthening the state while weakening democracy. The book adds importantly to our understanding of the neoliberal revolution, its origins and objectives, successes and failures.’Wolfgang Streeck, Emeritus Director and Senior Research Associate, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies, Cologne, Germany ‘Grégoire Chamayou provides a dazzling and wide-ranging genealogy of the intellectual ideas and political strategies which were used to undermine democracy and roll back the economic security and greater equality of the post-war years. An original and rewarding read.’Andrew Gamble, SPERI, University of Sheffield‘With this elegant and important work, Chamayou will surely succeed in bringing out your inner critic of the powers that be.’French CultureTable of ContentsTable of contents:Introduction Part I. Indocile workers Chapter One. Indiscipline on the shop floor Chapter Two. Human resources Chapter Three. Social insecurity Chapter Four. War on the unions Part Two. Managerial revolution Chapter Five. A theological crisis Chapter Six. Ethical managerialism Chapter Seven. Disciplining the managers Chapter Eight. Catallarchy Part Three. Attack on free enterprise Chapter Nine. Private government under siege Chapter Ten. The battle of ideas Chapter Eleven. How to react? Chapter Twelve. The corporation does not exist Chapter Thirteen. Police theories of the firm Part Four. A world of protesters Chapter Fourteen. Corporate counter-activism Chapter Fifteen. The production of the dominant dialogy Chapter Sixteen. Issue management Chapter Seventeen. Stakeholders Part Five. New regulations Chapter Eighteen. Soft law Chapter Nineteen. Costs/benefits Chapter Twenty. A critique of political ecology Chapter Twenty-One. Making people responsible Part Six. The ungovernable state Chapter Twenty-Two. The crisis of governability of the democracies Chapter Twenty-Three. Hayek in Chile Chapter Twenty-Four. The sources of authoritarian liberalism Chapter Twenty-Five. Dethroning politics Chapter Twenty-Six. The micropolitics of privatization Conclusion Notes Index

    10 in stock

    £52.25

  • Shareholder Cities: Land Transformations Along

    University of Pennsylvania Press Shareholder Cities: Land Transformations Along

    Book SynopsisEconomic corridors—ambitious infrastructural development projects that newly liberalizing countries in Asia and Africa are undertaking—are dramatically redefining the shape of urbanization. Spanning multiple cities and croplands, these corridors connect metropolises via high-speed superhighways in an effort to make certain strategic regions attractive destinations for private investment. As policy makers search for decentralized and market-oriented means for the transfer of land from agrarian constituencies to infrastructural promoters and urban developers, the reallocation of property control is erupting into volatile land-based social conflicts. In Shareholder Cities, Sai Balakrishnan argues that some of India's most decisive conflicts over its urban future will unfold in the regions along the new economic corridors where electorally strong agrarian propertied classes directly encounter financially powerful incoming urban firms. Balakrishnan focuses on the first economic corridor, the Mumbai-Pune Expressway, and the construction of three new cities along it. The book derives its title from a current mode of resolving agrarian-urban conflicts in which agrarian landowners are being transformed into shareholders in the corridor cities, and the distributional implications of these new land transformations. Shifting the focus of the study of India's contemporary urbanization away from megacities to these in-between corridor regions, Balakrishnan explores the production of uneven urban development that unsettles older histories of agrarian capitalism and the emergence of agrarian propertied classes as protagonists in the making of urban real estate markets. Shareholder Cities highlights the possibilities for a democratic politics of inclusion in which agrarian-urban encounters can create opportunities for previously excluded groups to stake new claims for themselves in the corridor regions.Trade Review"This book exemplifies scholarship that goes beyond simplistic generalizations. It challenges the Western conceptualizations of India’s urbanization and development processes." * Journal of Planning Education and Research *"Balakrishnan has produced a definitive report on the effects of market liberalization and decentralization of governance in the Western Indian region of the Mumbai-Pune economic corridor." * Eurasian Geography and Economics *"The book is an empirically rich and highly informative narrative of 'agrarian-urban uneven development' along India’s new economic corridors." * South Asia Multidisciplinary Academic Journal *"This book is well-written and easy to read. It takes on a difficult, complex set of processes and makes them accessible. It is ambitious in its scope, trying to bring together diverse theoretical frameworks that don’t often speak to each other." * International Journal of Urban and Regional Research *"In Shareholder Cities, compendious scholarship from agrarian, development and urban studies, law, planning, and history is woven together into a rich analytical fabric. Sai Balakrishnan has achieved such a tour de force in the new, necessary and transgressive field of agrarian urbanization that it is impossible not to be selective in these reflections." * Regional Studies *"[A]n original contribution to scholarship on urbanization in India’s post-liberalization era, and it fills a major gap in the literature on the political economy of Maharashtra and the role therein of Maratha-caste agrarian elites…Balakrishnan offers a fascinating and empirically rich account of the political and economic transformations along the new economic corridors." * Pacific Affairs *"Shareholder Cities brings nearly every big development question and debate in India into sharp focus. Through deep and rich case studies of cities along one of India's largest infrastructure corridors (Mumbai-Pune), Balakrishnan shows how large-scale land use changes are being driven, negotiated, and contested. Weaving together central themes in the most influential paradigms of developmental transformation, Sai Balakrishnan shows how capital, farmers, castes, state logics, and local democratic institutions all intersect in producing a range of outcomes. Shareholder Cities is that rare book that does not merely theorize but actually makes us understand how big structural forces of development work themselves out through the local." * Patrick Heller, Brown University *"Original, thoughtful, and timely, Shareholder Cities offers a fresh perspective on the political economy of land use change in one of the most dynamic regions of India." * Sanjoy Chakravorty, Temple University *"Shareholder Cities is a pathbreaking study of peripheral development along India's transportation corridors. Breaking with the urban-rural binary, Sai Balakrishnan compares different treatments of liminal space to identify those most benefiting poor people. Her attention to cooperatives is a particularly important investigation of the redevelopment of formerly agricultural lands into urban real estate." * Susan S. Fainstein, author of The Just City *

    £23.39

  • Evolutions of Capitalism: Historical

    Bristol University Press Evolutions of Capitalism: Historical

    Book SynopsisThis ambitious collection follows the evolution of capitalism from its origins in 13th-century European towns to its 16th-century expansion into Asia, Africa and South America and on to the global capitalism of modern day. Written by distinguished historians and social scientists, the chapters examine capitalism and its critics and the level of variation and convergence in its operation across locations. The authors illuminate the aspects of capitalism that have encouraged, but also limited, social responsibility and environmental sustainability. Covering times, places and topics that have often been overlooked in the existing literature, this important contribution to the field of economic history charts the most comprehensive chronology of capitalism to date.Table of Contents1. Introduction - Catherine Casson and Philipp Robinson Rössner 2. The Market as an Institution: Theory and History - Mark Casson 3. Regulating Capitalism - Philipp Robinson Rössner 4. Capitalism and State Ownership Models - Sverre A. Christensen 5. Comparative and Connected Global Capitalism(s) - Edmond Smith 6. Capitalism, Imperialism and the Emergence of an Industrialized Global Economy - Colin M. Lewis 7. Religion and Capitalism - David J. Jeremy 8. Capitalism and the Environment - Geoffrey Jones 9. Capitalism and Income Inequality - Catherine Casson 10. Conclusion - Catherine Casson and Philipp Robinson Rössner

    £76.00

  • Post-Corona Capitalism: The Alternatives Ahead

    Bristol University Press Post-Corona Capitalism: The Alternatives Ahead

    Book SynopsisThe COVID-19 pandemic is a Rorschach test for society: everyone sees something different in it, and the range of political and economic responses to the crisis can leave us feeling overwhelmed. This book cuts through the confusion, dissecting the new post-coronavirus capitalism into several policy areas and spheres of action to inform academic, policy and public discourse. Covering all the major aspects of contemporary capitalism that have been affected by the pandemic, Andreas Nölke deftly analyses the impacts of the crisis on our socio-economic and political systems. Signposting a new era for global capitalism, he offers alternatives for future economic development in the wake of COVID-19.Table of Contents1. Introduction: Confronting a Multidimensional Crisis of Capitalism Part 1: Capitalism and Society 2. Health Systems: Private or Public? 3. Welfare State: Restoration or Universal Basic Income? 4. Reproductive Work: Positive Re-evaluation or the Same Old Neglect? 5. Gendered Occupations: Equality or Back to Traditional Patterns? 6. Migration: Closed Borders or Open Doors? 7. Inequality: Increase or Reduction? Part 2: Domestic Institutions of Capitalism on the Demand Side 8. Monetary Policy: Democratic or Technocratic? 9. Fiscal Policy: Absolute Ceiling or no Limits to Deficit Spending? 10. Tax Policy: Conventional or Unconventional Measures? 11. Industrial Policy: Laissez-faire or State Leadership? Part 3: Domestic Institutions of Capitalism on the Supply Side 12. Corporate Governance: Public Responsibility or Shareholder Value? 13. Finance: Fragile or Stable? 14. Industrial Relations and Training: Strengthening or Weakening of Unions? 15. Innovation: Frugal or Radical? 16. Competition Policy: Economic Concentration as Vice or Virtue? Part 4: The International Institutions of Capitalism 17. Global Production Networks: Diversification or Reshoring? 18. Foreign Direct Investment: Promotion or Restriction? 19. Investor–State Dispute Settlement: Business as Usual or Moratorium? 20. Trade Policy: Liberalism or Protectionism? 21. Intellectual Property Rights: Global Commons for Vaccines or Private Property? 22. Global Health Governance: Intergovernmental or Private–Public Networks? 23. Foreign Debt in the Global South: Permanent Write-off or Temporary Relief? Part 5: Anthropocene Capitalism 24. Climate Change: Cheap Dirty Energy or Green New Deal? 25. Degrowth: Necessity or Fantasy? 26. Agriculture: Global Supply Chains or Local Community Support? Part 6: Geo-economic Shifts in Global Capitalism 27. China–US Struggle for Global Economic Hegemony: Contender or Incumbent? 28. EU Economic Governance: Erosion or Integration? 29. The Political Economy of Security: Less or More Protection? Part 7: Ideologies in Contemporary Capitalism 30. Authoritarian or Democratic Capitalism? 31. Liberal or Organized Capitalism? 32. Communitarian or Cosmopolitan Capitalism? 33. Conclusion: Competing Visions of Capitalism and their Perspectives

    £23.74

  • £72.00

  • Infrastructure Economics and Policy –

    Lincoln Institute of Land Policy Infrastructure Economics and Policy –

    3 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    3 in stock

    £42.50

  • The American Dream Is Not Dead: (But Populism

    Templeton Foundation Press,U.S. The American Dream Is Not Dead: (But Populism

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis Populists on both sides of the political aisle routinely announce that the American Dream is dead. According to them, the game has been rigged by elites, workers can’t get ahead, wages have been stagnant for decades, and the middle class is dying. Michael R. Strain, director of economic policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute, disputes this rhetoric as wrong and dangerous. In this succinctly argued volume, he shows that, on measures of economic opportunity and quality of life, there has never been a better time to be alive in America. He backs his argument with overwhelming—and underreported—data to show how the facts favor realistic optimism. He warns, however, that the false prophets of populism pose a serious danger to our current and future prosperity. Their policies would leave workers worse off. And their erroneous claim that the American Dream is dead could discourage people from taking advantage of real opportunities to better their lives. If enough people start to believe the Dream is dead, they could, in effect, kill it. To prevent this self-fulfilling prophecy, Strain’s book is urgent reading for anyone feeling the pull of the populists. E. J. Dionne and Henry Olsen provide spirited responses to Strain’s argument. Trade Review "An inoculation against politically motivated misinformation." —George Will, The Washington Post "Strain sets a fine example in his short, approachable book. He shows that living standards have not stagnated in America. To the contrary, most prime-age workers today are better off than their parents were. There are real economic and social problems, which policymakers should address. But the economy is not rigged for all but those at the very top. One should hope his message is heard—and repeated—far and wide." —William J. Luther, Independent Review​ “[A] much-needed look at everything that’s going right in this country….People often fall into a belief that life was somehow better in the past. In The American Dream Is Not Dead, Michael Strain shows it wasn’t, while not denying that the U.S. faces real challenges even in our prosperous age. It’s a good gift for that pessimistic reactionary down the street.”—National Review “Michael Strain’s book delivers a passionate defense that opportunity and meritocracy still exist in America.” —The Adam Smith Institute​ “Michael Strain offers a trenchant look at U.S. households' material standard of living. If his message were summarized on a hat, it would read ‘Make America Grateful Again.’” —N. Gregory Mankiw, Robert M. Beren Professor of Economics, Harvard University and former chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers “Michael Strain’s important book is a welcome antidote to the pervasive pessimism surrounding economic policy debates. I don’t agree on everything but feel better after reading it about our economy and more importantly, about how policy can make it better.” —Lawrence H. Summers, Charles W. Eliot University Professor, Harvard University and former Secretary of the Treasury "Without glossing over the real challenges that too many Americans face, Michael Strain makes a persuasive case that the American dream remains alive and well. And, he provides important policy recommendations that policymakers would do well to heed in order to strengthen the American dream." —Paul Ryan, former Speaker of the House of Representatives “In this important book, Mike Strain persuasively bolsters his title claim that ‘the American Dream is not dead.’ While the nation faces disruptive challenges from economic changes from trade and technology, those very changes help propel our prosperity. What could kill the American Dream, as Strain notes, is a populist call for protection. Every serious student of the current economic and political situation should read this book.” —Glenn Hubbard, dean emeritus and the Russell L. Carson Professor of Finance and Economics, Columbia Business School, and former chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers “Before you declare the American Dream is dead, you should take the time to read Michael Strain’s case to the contrary. Strain provides a thoughtful and balanced assessment of the evidence on the state of American workers and families, rejecting some of the claims from both the left and the right.” —Jason Furman, professor of practice, Harvard Kennedy School and former chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers “Michael Strain is one of the keenest economists at work on the center-right today. In this brief but important book, he dares to bring facts to the overheated and often poorly informed debate over the state of the American Dream. Engaging and convincing, this book is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand our economic present—and future.” —Rich Lowry, editor of National Review “In this lively contribution to our national debate, Michael Strain presents the evidence for how Americans are really doing. Strain shows we're faring better than you'd think from doom-sayers of left and right. He also argues that misunderstanding our real situation could lead to foolish and damaging policies that would make things worse, not better. An important short book.” —William Kristol, director, Defending Democracy Together "We have a bad news bias. Frequently, however, that creates an inaccurate picture of the world. In The American Dream Is Not Dead, Michael Strain shows that while there are very real challenges ahead of us as a country, Americans are living in the best, most prosperous time in our nation’s history. This book shows that hope and truth go together." —Arthur C. Brooks, professor of practice, Harvard Kennedy School Arthur C. Patterson Faculty Fellow, Harvard Business School “This vital book suggests we reconsider the doom and gloom economic narrative in favor of acknowledging that ongoing economic progress continues to deliver rising material prosperity each year, increasing opportunity, and greater freedom from want. The argument matters because the strongest foundation for a "small c" conservative perspective is that a system that delivers such progress is worth conserving. Strain's intellectual depth, policy breadth, and relentless honesty mark him as one of the leading conservative intellectuals of our time. I'm no conservative, partly because I might see the case for change more clearly than Strain. But Strain asks hard questions, presents uncomfortable data, and makes counterarguments more clearly than any other right-of-center wonk. Whatever side of politics you're on, this smart little book will make you a better wonk, with a clearer sense about the facts that underpin the biggest policy debates of our time.” —Justin Wolfers, professor of economics and public policy, University of Michigan "Just how good or bad are things in America right now? Michael Strain's The American Dream Is Not Dead is the most balanced and informative take on this question you are likely to see." —Tyler Cowen, professor of economics, George Mason University and coauthor of the Marginal Revolution blog “The American Dream is alive and well—not based on wishful thinking, but on abundant evidence. Michael Strain’s balanced and expert presentation, acknowledging problems but identifying the strengths in America’s economy, is exactly what the policy debate has needed: a data-driven look at good news that has been ignored by politicians of left and right alike.” —Charles Murray, F. A. Hayek Chair, American Enterprise Institute “While I’m not convinced that the American Dream is entirely healthy, I’m more optimistic about its prospects after reading this book. I’m regularly on the other side of an argument from Michael Strain, yet I crave reading what he writes because in it I’ll find more compelling reasoning than I’ll typically otherwise encounter. Michael’s willingness to engage constructively and convincingly makes him an important voice in any meaningful discussion about the American Dream.” —— Ali Velshi, host, “Velshi” on MSNBC “Michael Strain's The American Dream Is Not Dead should be read widely by people who think—or fear—otherwise. In clear and simple style, this accessible, no-nonsense treatise lays out the basic facts about the track record of the American economy and how the economy has delivered for ordinary Americans by such yardsticks as wage growth, middle class job creation, family income, and economic mobility. By these and other criteria, he argues, performance in recent decades has been tolerably good—certainly much better than many of us have been told.” —Nicholas Eberstadt, Henry Wendt Chair in Political Economy, American Enterprise InstituteTable of Contents Introduction / 3 Part 1: The American Dream Is Not Dead 1. Defining the Dream / 9 2. Today’s Message: The Dream Is Dead / 11 3. We Have Real Challenges / 15 4. The American Dream Is Not Dead / 23 5. Today’s Economy Is Delivering / 27 6. Incomes Are Growing / / 33 7. Quality of Life Has Clearly Improved / 59 8. “Hollowing Out” Won’t Be the End of the Story / 63 9. America Is an Upwardly Mobile Society / 77 10. Advancing the Dream / 101 Part 2: Dissenting Points of View 11. Populism Isn’t the Problem: It’s a Response to Inequality by E. J. Dionne / 115 12. Why Economic Trends Support Conservative Populism by Henry Olsen / 125 13. A Response to E. J. Dionne and Henry Olsen / 133 Acknowledgments 143Notes / 145 About the Contributors / 151 About the Author / 153

    1 in stock

    £13.29

  • The Innovation Tournament Handbook: A

    Wharton Digital Press The Innovation Tournament Handbook: A

    Book SynopsisWhat new products or services should you launch next year? How can you improve the productivity of a paint line? What should you name your new venture? How can you decrease patient waiting times? How can you improve the customer experience? Pretty much any creative problem-solving task can be framed as seeking a new match between solution and need, from operational process improvements to creating strategies to foster organic growth. Innovation tournaments aim to find a match that is not just good, but exceptional. Leveraging more than two decades of experience organizing innovation tournaments in Silicon Valley and on Wall Street, from Buenos Aires to Kuwait City, Shanghai to Moscow, and with many Fortune 500 companies, two renowned researchers, entrepreneurs, and the foremost experts on innovation tournaments offer a template that you can use to generate winning ideas that will drive great outcomes—whatever your challenges, whatever your business. In The Innovation Tournament Handbook: A Step-by-Step Guide to Finding Exceptional Solutions to Any Challenge, Wharton professors Christian Terwiesch and Karl T. Ulrich offer an engaging, often humorous, and always actionable guide to help you learn: --How to frame and articulate your specific innovation challenge --How to decide on the right format, structure, and strategic direction for your own innovation tournament --How to maximize the quality of the opportunities that will compete --How to select the very best ideas --How to develop those ideas into real-world opportunities --How to use tournaments to foster a culture of innovation Fast-reading and filled with real-world successes, The Innovation Tournament Handbook is a comprehensive roadmap to finding a new match between a solution and a need that is not merely good, but exceptional.Trade Review"A lively, thoughtful primer for generating solutions to a wide range of problems." * Kirkus Reviews *"Innovation is one of the greatest opportunities to address the challenges we face in the world. In The Innovation Tournament Handbook, Wharton professors Christian Terwiesch and Karl Ulrich offer a method for generating winning ideas that will drive great outcomes." * Neil Blumenthal, CEO, Warby Parker *"Accessible and fast-reading, Christian Terwiesch and Karl Ulrich’s new book is filled with stories of organizations that have run innovation tournaments that have generated game-changing successes. In The Innovation Tournament Handbook, the authors break down how they did it and offer a step-by-step guide for anyone wishing to do the same." * Eurie Kim, Managing Partner, Forerunner Ventures *"Clarity, accessibility, and usefulness are the hallmarks of The Innovation Tournament Handbook. Despite being a quick read for anyone short on time, the step-by-step ideas presented by Christian Terwiesch and Karl Ulrich are easy to remember, and even easier to apply. After completing the book, you’ll be able to run a tournament of your own with confidence—and in no time flat." * Phil Kim, Chief Innovation, Strategy & Creative Officer, Universal Nutrition *"At last, Wharton professors Christian Terwiesch and Karl Ulrich have distilled their experience running more than 100 innovation tournaments to provide a roadmap anyone can use to run their own. The Innovation Tournament Handbook is a must-read for anyone who wants to find an optimal match between a challenge and an exceptional solution." * Ravi Viswanathan, Founder & Managing Partner, NewView Capital *"At PennMedicine we have conducted a number of innovation tournaments ranging from focused workshops at the department level to tournaments that involved our entire network. The tournament process not only created exceptional ideas but also helped us foster a culture of innovation." * Kevin B. Mahoney, CEO, Penn Medicine *"With The Innovation Tournament Handbook, Christian Terwiesch and Karl Ulrich apply their vast experience in innovation to offer organizations of all sizes a novel way to generate ideas to address a broad range of challenges." * Andres E. Sadler, CEO Global Business Services, Wolters Kluwer *

    £17.09

  • The Innovation Tournament Handbook: A

    Wharton Digital Press The Innovation Tournament Handbook: A

    Book SynopsisWhat new products or services should you launch next year? How can you improve the productivity of a paint line? What should you name your new venture? How can you decrease patient waiting times? How can you improve the customer experience? Pretty much any creative problem-solving task can be framed as seeking a new match between solution and need, from operational process improvements to creating strategies to foster organic growth. Innovation tournaments aim to find a match that is not just good, but exceptional. Leveraging more than two decades of experience organizing innovation tournaments in Silicon Valley and on Wall Street, from Buenos Aires to Kuwait City, Shanghai to Moscow, and with many Fortune 500 companies, two renowned researchers, entrepreneurs, and the foremost experts on innovation tournaments offer a template that you can use to generate winning ideas that will drive great outcomes—whatever your challenges, whatever your business. In The Innovation Tournament Handbook: A Step-by-Step Guide to Finding Exceptional Solutions to Any Challenge, Wharton professors Christian Terwiesch and Karl T. Ulrich offer an engaging, often humorous, and always actionable guide to help you learn: --How to frame and articulate your specific innovation challenge --How to decide on the right format, structure, and strategic direction for your own innovation tournament --How to maximize the quality of the opportunities that will compete --How to select the very best ideas --How to develop those ideas into real-world opportunities --How to use tournaments to foster a culture of innovation Fast-reading and filled with real-world successes, The Innovation Tournament Handbook is a comprehensive roadmap to finding a new match between a solution and a need that is not merely good, but exceptional.Trade Review"A lively, thoughtful primer for generating solutions to a wide range of problems." * Kirkus Reviews *"Innovation is one of the greatest opportunities to address the challenges we face in the world. In The Innovation Tournament Handbook, Wharton professors Christian Terwiesch and Karl Ulrich offer a method for generating winning ideas that will drive great outcomes." * Neil Blumenthal, CEO, Warby Parker *"Accessible and fast-reading, Christian Terwiesch and Karl Ulrich’s new book is filled with stories of organizations that have run innovation tournaments that have generated game-changing successes. In The Innovation Tournament Handbook, the authors break down how they did it and offer a step-by-step guide for anyone wishing to do the same." * Eurie Kim, Managing Partner, Forerunner Ventures *"Clarity, accessibility, and usefulness are the hallmarks of The Innovation Tournament Handbook. Despite being a quick read for anyone short on time, the step-by-step ideas presented by Christian Terwiesch and Karl Ulrich are easy to remember, and even easier to apply. After completing the book, you’ll be able to run a tournament of your own with confidence—and in no time flat." * Phil Kim, Chief Innovation, Strategy & Creative Officer, Universal Nutrition *"At last, Wharton professors Christian Terwiesch and Karl Ulrich have distilled their experience running more than 100 innovation tournaments to provide a roadmap anyone can use to run their own. The Innovation Tournament Handbook is a must-read for anyone who wants to find an optimal match between a challenge and an exceptional solution." * Ravi Viswanathan, Founder & Managing Partner, NewView Capital *"At PennMedicine we have conducted a number of innovation tournaments ranging from focused workshops at the department level to tournaments that involved our entire network. The tournament process not only created exceptional ideas but also helped us foster a culture of innovation." * Kevin B. Mahoney, CEO, Penn Medicine *"With The Innovation Tournament Handbook, Christian Terwiesch and Karl Ulrich apply their vast experience in innovation to offer organizations of all sizes a novel way to generate ideas to address a broad range of challenges." * Andres E. Sadler, CEO Global Business Services, Wolters Kluwer *

    £38.25

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