In The Black Swan, Nassim Nicholas Taleb wrote on the highly improbable and unpredictable events that underlie almost everything about our world. In Antifragile, Taleb aims to stand uncertainty on its head, making it desirable, even necessary. Steve Fuller comments on the applicability of Taleb’s work to academia and discusses just how 'fragile' the academic way of being has become
Inequality is a charged topic. Professional macroeconomists have generally taken little interest in ...
What is to be done in the face of crisis, when the very trope of crisis curtails our ability to imag...
The Coming Prosperity shows how benefits from four centuries of technological and organisational cha...
Reviewer Adam Oliver finds that Richard Thaler’s new book, Misbehaving: The Making of Behavioural Ec...
Nassim Taleb is a Wall Street trader who has written one technical book (‘Dynamic Hedging’, 1997) an...
Review of the following book: THOMAS GILOVICH, How WE KNOW WHAT ISN\u27T SO: THE FALLIABILITY OF REA...
Why, I wondered, did Organization Studies want someone to review a book, written by a philosopher, a...
Offshoring introduces John Urry’s panoptic vision of a world in which democracy is all at sea. While...
Against the backdrop of rising economic inequality, Why We Can’t Afford the Rich tackles the myth th...
Is the pursuit of profit our destiny as a species? Are we living in a profitocracy rather than a dem...
Shortlisted for the 2016 European Book Prize, in Slippery Slope: Europe’s Troubled Future journalist...
In this book, Jared Diamond reveals how tribal societies offer an extraordinary window into how our ...
Karl Baker considers this unique book on contemporary issues in architecture and urbanism, centring ...
Barbara Richter considers the changes we must make to see off future economic and environmental cris...
Suki Ferguson reviews Derek Bok‘s in-depth work on happiness and public policy, believing that David...
Inequality is a charged topic. Professional macroeconomists have generally taken little interest in ...
What is to be done in the face of crisis, when the very trope of crisis curtails our ability to imag...
The Coming Prosperity shows how benefits from four centuries of technological and organisational cha...
Reviewer Adam Oliver finds that Richard Thaler’s new book, Misbehaving: The Making of Behavioural Ec...
Nassim Taleb is a Wall Street trader who has written one technical book (‘Dynamic Hedging’, 1997) an...
Review of the following book: THOMAS GILOVICH, How WE KNOW WHAT ISN\u27T SO: THE FALLIABILITY OF REA...
Why, I wondered, did Organization Studies want someone to review a book, written by a philosopher, a...
Offshoring introduces John Urry’s panoptic vision of a world in which democracy is all at sea. While...
Against the backdrop of rising economic inequality, Why We Can’t Afford the Rich tackles the myth th...
Is the pursuit of profit our destiny as a species? Are we living in a profitocracy rather than a dem...
Shortlisted for the 2016 European Book Prize, in Slippery Slope: Europe’s Troubled Future journalist...
In this book, Jared Diamond reveals how tribal societies offer an extraordinary window into how our ...
Karl Baker considers this unique book on contemporary issues in architecture and urbanism, centring ...
Barbara Richter considers the changes we must make to see off future economic and environmental cris...
Suki Ferguson reviews Derek Bok‘s in-depth work on happiness and public policy, believing that David...
Inequality is a charged topic. Professional macroeconomists have generally taken little interest in ...
What is to be done in the face of crisis, when the very trope of crisis curtails our ability to imag...
The Coming Prosperity shows how benefits from four centuries of technological and organisational cha...