Prospering Wisely argues that we need to think about the nature of \u27prosperity\u27 in much broader terms than its usual purely financial definition. Drawing on expert views from influential academics such as Nicholas Stern, Mary Beard and Peter Hennessy, it explores the many ways in which \u27prosperity\u27 is dependent on the ways the humanities and social sciences enhance our lives, as individuals and as a society. Lord Stern, President of the British Academy, says: "Prosperity stretches way beyond material income or consumption. It is how we live, how we interact with each other, what our sense of community and identity is, and how we manage uncertainty and anxiety. "The humanities and social sciences are about challenging, being aw...
Why are we are no happier than we once were? Should raising well-being be the aim of government? Thi...
Society today faces a difficult contradiction: we know exactly how the physical limits of our planet...
Is ‘slow scholarship’ feasible in the competitive context of academic careers where managerialism, s...
We are witnessing a growing mistrust, not only in political processes and politicians, but in social...
What do the arts, humanities and social sciences do for the UK? Are they a luxury we can no longer a...
Higher education is historically rooted in a model of learning based in the Humanities in which lite...
This booklet illustrates how research and scholarship in the social sciences and humanities, nurture...
The crisis of our times is that we have science without wisdom. Modern science and technology lead t...
Nicholas Maxwell argues that the growth in academic work devoted to policy issues could mark the beg...
Arts and humanities research appears to have a problem when it comes to making an argument that it m...
A report released by Shearer West and colleagues confounds popular notions regarding the usefulness ...
Modern, liberal societies face a number of overarching challenges: demographic changes, increasing i...
The humanities and social sciences are academic disciplines dedicated to the study of society, the e...
We are in a state of impending crisis. And the fault lies in part with academia. For two centuries o...
The United Kingdom today is a society in transition. The impact of the economic recession, changing ...
Why are we are no happier than we once were? Should raising well-being be the aim of government? Thi...
Society today faces a difficult contradiction: we know exactly how the physical limits of our planet...
Is ‘slow scholarship’ feasible in the competitive context of academic careers where managerialism, s...
We are witnessing a growing mistrust, not only in political processes and politicians, but in social...
What do the arts, humanities and social sciences do for the UK? Are they a luxury we can no longer a...
Higher education is historically rooted in a model of learning based in the Humanities in which lite...
This booklet illustrates how research and scholarship in the social sciences and humanities, nurture...
The crisis of our times is that we have science without wisdom. Modern science and technology lead t...
Nicholas Maxwell argues that the growth in academic work devoted to policy issues could mark the beg...
Arts and humanities research appears to have a problem when it comes to making an argument that it m...
A report released by Shearer West and colleagues confounds popular notions regarding the usefulness ...
Modern, liberal societies face a number of overarching challenges: demographic changes, increasing i...
The humanities and social sciences are academic disciplines dedicated to the study of society, the e...
We are in a state of impending crisis. And the fault lies in part with academia. For two centuries o...
The United Kingdom today is a society in transition. The impact of the economic recession, changing ...
Why are we are no happier than we once were? Should raising well-being be the aim of government? Thi...
Society today faces a difficult contradiction: we know exactly how the physical limits of our planet...
Is ‘slow scholarship’ feasible in the competitive context of academic careers where managerialism, s...