Description

Book Synopsis

A fascinating history of the world economy over the last fifty years told through the life of a single ship, from a brilliant young historian.

Capitalism. International law. Imperial decline. National sovereignty. Inflation. Sectoral stagnation. Gentrification. Mass incarceration. Booms. Busts. Racism. Greed. Empty Vessel is the story of globalism in one boat. First built as a Swedish offshore oil rig in the 1970s, it went on to house British soldiers in the Falklands War in the 1980s, prisoners from Riker's Island in New York's East River in the 1990s, Volkswagen factory employees in Germany in the 2000s, and Nigerian oil workers off the coast of Africa in the 2010s. In each of its lives it arrived as an empty vessel, filled at the behest of both public and private interests, for purposes of war, incarceration, and commerce - connecting people thousands of miles apart, all shaped by the same global economic transformations. So much of our global economy is comp

Empty Vessel

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    RRP £15.99 – you save £1.60 (10%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Wed 17 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback by Ian Kumekawa

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      View other formats and editions of Empty Vessel by Ian Kumekawa

      Publisher: John Murray Press
      Publication Date: 1/6/2025
      ISBN13: 9781399816236, 978-1399816236
      ISBN10: 1399816233
      Also in:
      Geopolitics

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      A fascinating history of the world economy over the last fifty years told through the life of a single ship, from a brilliant young historian.

      Capitalism. International law. Imperial decline. National sovereignty. Inflation. Sectoral stagnation. Gentrification. Mass incarceration. Booms. Busts. Racism. Greed. Empty Vessel is the story of globalism in one boat. First built as a Swedish offshore oil rig in the 1970s, it went on to house British soldiers in the Falklands War in the 1980s, prisoners from Riker's Island in New York's East River in the 1990s, Volkswagen factory employees in Germany in the 2000s, and Nigerian oil workers off the coast of Africa in the 2010s. In each of its lives it arrived as an empty vessel, filled at the behest of both public and private interests, for purposes of war, incarceration, and commerce - connecting people thousands of miles apart, all shaped by the same global economic transformations. So much of our global economy is comp

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