what you get here

This is not a blog which opines on current events. It rather uses incidents, books (old and new), links and papers to muse about our social endeavours.
So old posts are as good as new! And lots of useful links!

The Bucegi mountains - the range I see from the front balcony of my mountain house - are almost 120 kms from Bucharest and cannot normally be seen from the capital but some extraordinary weather conditions allowed this pic to be taken from the top of the Intercontinental Hotel in late Feb 2020

Saturday, April 25, 2026

DEALING WITH VALUES

I had missed Mark Carney’s latest book Values – Building a better word for all which came out in 2021. Its summary reads thus -

Whenever I could step back from what felt like daily crisis management, the same deeper issues loomed. What is value? How is it grounded? Which values underpin value? Can the very act of valuation shape our values and constrain our choices? How do the valuations of markets affect the values of our society? Does the narrowness of our vision, the poverty of our perspective, mean we undervalue what matters to our collective wellbeing?

These are the questions that this book seeks to explore. It will examine how our society came to embody Wilde’s aphorism –knowing the price of everything but the value of nothing. How by elevating belief in the market to an inviolable truth we moved from a market economy to a market society. And how we can turn this around. In many respects, this book is a belated response to a question posed a few summers ago when a range of policymakers, business people, academics, labour leaders and charity workers gathered at the Vatican to discuss the future of the market system. Pope Francis surprised us by joining the lunch and sharing a parable. He observed that:

Our meal will be accompanied by wine. Now, wine is many things. It has a bouquet, colour and richness of taste that all complement the food. It has alcohol that can enliven the mind. Wine enriches all our senses. At the end of our feast, we will have grappa. Grappa is one thing: alcohol. Grappa is wine distilled.

He continued:

Humanity is many things – passionate, curious, rational, altruistic, creative, self-interested. But the market is one thing: self-interest. The market is humanity distilled.

And then he challenged us:

Your job is to turn the grappa back into wine, to turn the market back into humanity.

This isn’t theology. This is reality. This is the truth. This book draws on my experience in the private sector and public policy to examine the relationship between value and values. How they shape each other, and how, by doing so, they can determine our livelihoods, identities and possibilities. And how, once we recognise these dynamics, we can turn grappa back into wine.

The book is divided into three parts. Part I examines various concepts of value and their roots in political philosophy and, more recently and narrowly, in economic theory and financial practice. It uses a series of valuation paradoxes from art to the environment to illustrate the potential disconnects between valuations in markets and the values of society.

Values and value are related but distinct. In the most general terms, values represent the principles or standards of behaviour; they are judgements of what is important in life. Examples include integrity, fairness, kindness, excellence, sustainability, passion and reason. Value is the regard that something is held to deserve – the importance, worth or usefulness of something. Both value and values are judgements. And therein lies the rub. Increasingly, the value of something, of some act or of someone is equated with their monetary value, a monetary value that is determined by the market. The logic of buying and selling no longer applies only to material goods but increasingly governs the whole of life from the allocation of healthcare to education, public safety and environmental protection. When we decide that certain goods and services can be bought and sold, we decide that they can be treated as commodities, as instruments of profit and use. And we assume, again at least implicitly, that the values of society will remain unchanged in the process. But as Part I shows, when everything is relative, nothing is immutable.

To draw out the relationship between value and values, Chapters 3 and 4 explain how money is used to measure value and what gives money its value. The historic formal backing of money by gold is contrasted with its current informal backing by institutions like central banks. It reveals how the value of such fiat money is grounded in underlying values of trust, integrity and transparency. Chapter 5 then looks forward, exploring key questions about the future of money including whether cryptocurrencies could be solutions to the mistrust of central authorities and how trust scores in social media (and the surveillance state) could ‘monetise’ social capital.

Chapter 6 shows that our deepest challenges are rooted in the narrowing of our values to market fundamentalism, and it explains how this is contributing to the growing exclusivity of capitalism and the rise of populism. In particular, it argues that, just as all ideologies are prone to extremes, capitalism loses its sense of moderation when the belief in the power of the market enters the realm of faith. In the decades prior to the financial crisis, such

radicalism came to dominate economic ideas and became a pattern of social behaviour. In short, we have moved from a market economy to a market society, and this is now undermining our basic social contract of relative equality of outcomes, equality of opportunity and fairness across generations.

Part II explores the three most significant crises of the twenty-first century – of credit, Covid and climate.

In each case, it examines the underlying causes and describes policy responses. The book argues that, when taken together, these events were driven by a common crisis of values, and that our response could begin to recast the relationship between values and value, providing the basis for the strategies for individual, companies, investors and countries that are described in Part III.

As Chapter 7 shows, market fundamentalism contributed directly to the global credit crisis, in the form of light-touch regulation, a belief that bubbles cannot be identified and a misplaced confidence in a new era. Authorities and market participants fell under the spell of the three lies of finance, believing that ‘this time is different’, that ‘markets are always right’ and that ‘markets are moral’.

Rather than reinforcing social capital, we consumed it. Banks were deemed too big to fail, operating in a ‘heads I win, tails you lose’ bubble. Equity markets blatantly favoured technologically empowered institutions over retail investors. With too few market participants feeling responsible for the system, bad behaviour went unchecked, proliferated and eventually became the norm. In such an environment, means and ends conflate all too easily. Value becomes abstract and relative, and the pull of the crowd overwhelms the integrity of the individual. The resulting unjust sharing of risk and reward widens inequalities and corrodes the social fabric on which finance depends.

Chapter 8 reviews my experience leading the G20’s efforts to create a safer, simpler and fairer financial system. It argues that in order for financial reforms to rebuild social capital they must balance the tension between free-market capitalism, which reinforces the primacy of the individual at the expense of the system, and social capital, which requires from individuals a sense of responsibility for the system. In other words, a sense of self must be accompanied by a sense of solidarity.

Chapter 9 describes the causes and dynamics of Covid-19 which has wrought twin crises of health and economics, both unprecedented in our lifetimes. This global pandemic has moved with alarming speed and virulence because of deep global interconnectedness, but its severity has been magnified by our failure to prepare adequately despite ample and varied warnings. For too long, we undervalued resilience and have been forced to pay the heaviest costs. The economic shock has resulted in deep recessions and enormous jobs losses, and it now threatens to widen the fissures of inequality in the years to come. Despite these tragedies, as Chapter 10 outlines, this crisis could help reverse the causality between value and values. When pushed, societies have prioritised health first and foremost, and then looked to address the economic consequences. Cost–benefit analyses, steeped in calculations of the Value of Statistical Lives, have mercifully been overruled, as the values of economic dynamism and efficiency have been joined by those of solidarity, fairness, responsibility and compassion.

Basing our response on objectives derived from these values, and not on an economic determination of where the net benefit lies, will be the key to building back better. This is completely achievable; our limited historical experience with such epochal events is that afterwards the aspirations of society focus not just on the rate of growth but also on its direction and its quality. In the aftermath of the health crisis, it’s reasonable to expect public demands for improvements in the quality and coverage of social support and medical care, for greater attention to be paid to managing tail risks and for more heed to be given to the advice of scientific experts.

How we address the climate crisis will be the test of these new values. After all, climate change is an issue that i) involves the entire world, from which no one will be able to self-isolate, ii) is predicted by science to be the central risk tomorrow, and iii) we can address only if we act in advance and in solidarity. Climate change is the ultimate betrayal of intergenerational equity. It imposes costs on future generations that the current generation has no direct incentives to fix.

As Chapter 11 explains, we face the ‘tragedy of the horizon’ in which the catastrophic impacts of climate change will be felt beyond the traditional perspectives of most business, investors, politicians and central bankers. In other words, once the physical effects of climate change become the defining issue for a critical mass of decision makers, it could be too late to stop their catastrophic effects.

Like the financial crisis, the tragedy of the horizon represents a crisis of valuation and values. Compare the valuations of Amazon and the Amazon region. Amazon’s $1.5 trillion equity valuation reflects the market’s judgement that the company will be very profitable for a very long time. In contrast, it is only once the rainforest is cleared and a cattle herd or soya plantation is placed on the newly opened land that the Amazon region begins to have market value. The costs to the climate and biodiversity of destroying the rainforest appear on no ledger.

Chapter 11 highlights how changes in climate policies, new technologies and growing physical risks will prompt reassessments of virtually every financial asset. Firms that align their business models with the transition to a net-zero carbon economy will be rewarded handsomely; those that fail to adapt will cease to exist.

To address the climate crisis we need innovation on every front, and Chapter 12 on climate change details how the financial system can be retooled to make the markets a part of the solution. With comprehensive climate disclosure, a transformation in climate risk management by banks and the mainstreaming of sustainable investment, we can ensure that every financial decision takes climate change into account.

This new sustainable finance can work alongside private innovation and aggressive government action to help deliver net zero. The importance of this goal cannot be overstated: the task is large, the window of opportunity is short and the risks are existential. How our economy conceptualises value has been standing in the way.

Both the climate and Covid crises demonstrate the value of society forging a consensus around common goals, and then letting market dynamism determine how to achieve them rather than pursuing a trade-off between what society values and optimising current financial values as priced in the market.

Part III of the book builds on the responses to the three crises to draw out common themes and to create action plans for leaders, companies, investors and countries. It concludes with a new platform-based approach to managing the global commons in the wake of the demise of the rules-based international order.

To rebuild an inclusive social contract, it is essential to recognise the importance of values and beliefs in economic life. Economic and political philosophers from Adam Smith (1759) to Friedrich Hayek (1960) have long stressed that beliefs are part of inherited social capital, which provides the social framework for the free market. The experience of the three crises suggests that the common values and beliefs that underpin a successful economy are:

dynamism to help create solutions and channel human creativity;

resilience to make it easier to bounce back from shocks while protecting the most vulnerable in society;

sustainability with long-term perspectives that align incentives across generations;

fairness, particularly in markets to sustain their legitimacy;

responsibility so that individuals feel accountable for their actions;

solidarity whereby citizens recognise their obligations to each other and share a sense of community and society; and

humility to recognise the limits of our knowledge, understanding and power so that we act as custodians seeking to improve the common good.

These beliefs and values are not fixed. They need to be nurtured. Just as any revolution eats its children, unchecked market fundamentalism devours the social capital essential for the longterm dynamism of capitalism itself. Markets on their own will never be adequately incentivised to build social capital, which requires a sense of purpose and common values among individuals, companies, investors and countries. Conversely, values are like muscles that grow with exercise. The book therefore turns to the imperatives of how to recognise and reinforce these essential social foundations of the common good.

Chapter 13 on leadership examines the traits and behaviours necessary for leaders to catalyse change, help their colleagues realise their potential and encourage their organisations to fulfil their missions. To inspire the confidence and trust for their initiatives to be most effective, leaders must engage, explain and emote. Leaders must continually earn their legitimacy, and to maximise the impact of their organisation they must stay true to its purpose – a purpose grounded in the objectives of clients, colleagues and community. Great leadership isn’t just effective, it’s also ethical, building both value and virtue through its exercise.

How purposeful companies create value is the focus of Chapter 14. It reviews the evidence of the alignment between purpose and long-term value creation – dynamism – from the perspectives of both companies and societies. The chapter then describes various strategies for purposeful corporations to benefit all stakeholders. True corporate purpose drives engagement with stakeholders, including employees (by being a responsible and responsive employer), suppliers and customers (through honest, fair and lasting relationships in the supply chain) and communities (as good corporate citizens that make full contributions to society). Corporate purpose embeds solidarity at local, national and supranational levels, and recognises the paramount need for sustainability across generations. By uniting broader interests behind a common purpose, purposeful companies can be more impactful, dynamic and profitable.

Chapter 15 then outlines how investors can both reinforce these initiatives and be rewarded by them. A critical element of rebalancing value and values will be developing and embedding comprehensive and transparent approaches to measuring stakeholder value creation by companies. The chapter shows how best to measure sustainable and financial value, the dynamic relationship between these two sources of value and the strategies investors can pursue to maximise both.

Sustainable investing is developing into an essential tool to bring the values of the market into line with those of society. It improves the measurement of what society values from workplace diversity to the Sustainable Development Goals, the SDGs. It is being deployed to increase shareholder value through multiple channels by helping companies to attract and retain the best people, to increase their resilience, improve efficiency, align better with stakeholders and maintain social licence. When social needs – such as climate change– are tackled with a profitable business model, the answers to many of the most deeply rooted problems we face become scalable and self-sustaining.

The many policy strands discussed in the book are brought together in Chapter 16 to develop a framework for countries to build value for all. This is built on traditional foundations of strong institutions, and investments in physical and human capital. Given the far-reaching changes wrought by new technologies from artificial intelligence to bio-engineering, there must be a heavy emphasis on mandatory workforce training, universal skills development, the balancing of rights of all stakeholders, incentives to promote an enterprise society, and free trade for small and medium-sized enterprises.

Country strategies must make existing markets work better and build new markets. But markets alone won’t solve our most intractable problems. We need political processes to define our goals and objectives – to set our values. Markets can then be marshalled to help discover and drive solutions in a form of mission-oriented capitalism. As we shall see, however, given that the marketisation of society has created some of our problems, the market simply cannot be the answer to every question.


Carney’s book is best read in conjunction with Mariana Mazzucato‘s The Value of Everything – making and taking in the global economy (2018)

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

The Great Transformation

The Great Transformation is a good title for a book - there are, in fact, no fewer than 3 books which bear the title of “The Great Transformation” – the first by Bessant (in 2021 subtitled History for a Techno-Human Future), the second by Karen Armstrong in 2006 (subtitled The Beginning of our (religious) traditions ) and the final by Karel Polyani – written in 1944 and subtitled The political and economic origins of our time)Four if you include Milanovic who add “Great” to his title of 2025 - The Great Global Transformation Branko Milanovic 

My recent reading
Generation Left Keir Milburn 2019 only 68pp
American Fascists – the American Right and the war on America Chris Hedges (2006) 
to which I was brought by this post
The Problem of Pain CS Lewis (1947)
Labour in Contemporary Capitalism – what next? Ursula Huws (2019) looks excellent. 
I particularly liked the way her Introduction summarises the texts produced in the 
last few decades. More authors should be doing this
The Death of Distance Francis Cairncross (1997) One of the early books about the great 
transformation
The Coming Storm – power, conflict and warnings from history Odd Westad (2026)
We are entering a phase where multiple Great Powers jostle for supremacy within regions 
and within human endeavors such as nuclear technology, artificial intelligence, or space 
exploration. Trade, which was becoming freer for two generations, almost back to where it 
was before World War I started, is increasingly more restricted and fragile, and trade wars 
are breaking out among major powers. This world is unlike anything any of us have 
experienced in our lifetimes. But it does look quite a bit like the world of more than a 
hundred years ago, from the late nineteenth century to 1914. Back then we also had a 
world of many Great Powers that clashed with one another and sought to dominate their 
neighborhoods. Nationalism and populism were on the rise, and many people felt that the 
globalization of the day had not worked for them.
The Moon is Down John Steinbeck (1942)
Anarchists Never Surrender – essays, polemics and other correspondence on Anarchism 
ed Victor Serge and Mitchell Abador (2015)
Concept of the Mind Gilbert Ryle (1957)
Democratic Elitism: The Founding Myth of American Political Science Natasha Piano (2025)

My alternative narrative questions whether we should continue to identify modern democracy as synonymous with free and fair elections. Reviving the Italian School’s original contributions unearths a theory of democracy that might help us disassociate these two concepts in our political vocabulary. The point of this endeavor is not to eliminate elections from democratic theory.

Rather, I maintain, deflating the democratic expectations of electoral politics can help restore the legitimacy of elections and actually revive their proper role in modern popular government.

Today, when the future of contemporary democracies appears murky, the definition of democracy as free and fair elections no longer maintains the clarity that it once promised. Retracing the genealogy of democratic elitism might not only purge us of old bad habits; it might also lead us to a fresh conception of modern democracy following the Italian tradition of buon governo—democracy as part and parcel of good government.

Elites and Democracy Hugo Drochon (2026)

What’s Left? How the Left Lost its Way Nick Cohen (2007)

The Web of Meaning Jeremy Lent 2021 An important book to which I need to dedicate some patience

The Great Global Transformation Branko Milanovic 2025 199 pages
After Nations Rana Dasgupta (2026)
The Lomborg Deception – setting the record straight about global warming Howard Friel (2010)
The Language of Climate Politics, fossil-fuel propoganda and how to fight it 
G Guenther (2024)

This propaganda is spun out of six key terms that dominate the language of 
climate politics: alarmist, cost, growth, “India and China,” innovation, and 
resilience. Together these terms weave a narrative that goes something like this:

Yes, climate change is real, but calling it an existential threat is just alarmist—and anyway phasing out coal, oil, and gas would cost us too much. Human flourishing relies on the economic growth enabled by fossil fuels, so we need to keep using them and deal with climate change by fostering technological innovation and increasing our resilience. Besides, America should not act unilaterally on the climate crisis while emissions are rising in India and China.”

On The Calculation of Volume – vol 1 Solvej Balle (2024) a novel
China’s Twentieth Century Wang Hui (2016)
Capital Rules – the construction of Global Finance  R Abdelal (2007)
Lies, Spies and Exile – the extraordinary story of the Russian Spie, Robert Blake Simon Kupar (2021)
The Writer and the Traitor Robert Verkaik (2026)
Irregular Army -how the war on terror brought neo-nazis, gang members and criminals 

 

into the US military  Matt Kennard (2012)

On September 10, 2001, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld stood in front of the assembled great and good of the Pentagon and delivered an expansive lecture entitled Bureaucracy to Battlefield.2 Its prescriptions were extremely radical—among the most portentous in US military history —but thanks to the terrorist atrocities the following day his words remain buried deep in the memory hole, while their consequences are buried under the sands of Iraq and Afghanistan. “The topic today is an adversary that poses a threat, a serious threat, to the security of the United States of America,” Rumsfeld began, before revealing the threat to be not Al-Qaeda, but the “Pentagon bureaucracy.” “Not the people, but the processes,” he added reassuringly. “Not the civilians, but the systems. Not the men and women in uniform, but the uniformity of thought and action that we too often impose on them.” In essence, Rumsfeld’s speech that day was designed to lay the ground and soften up his workers for a massive privatization of the Department of Defense’s services.

The Long 1989 – decades of global revolution ed Kockiki and Kal (2019)

Reflections on the Revolution in Europe Ralf Dahrendorf (1990)
Reflections on the Revolution of our time Harold Laski (1947)
Episode of Maigret with Rowan Atkinson
Toynbee’s A Study of History ed Somervell (1947)
Artful Truths – the philosophy of memoir Helena de Bres (2021)
The Great Awakening – new modes of life amongst capitalist ruins ed A Grear and 
D Bollier (2020)
Radical Republicanism – recovering the traditions of popular heritage ed Stuart White 
et al (2020)
Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner?  Film with Spencer Tracey
Dismantling Solidarity – Capitalist politics and American pensions since the new 
deal Michael McCarthy (2017)
War and Power – who wins wars and why Philips O’Brien (2025)

Monday, April 13, 2026

EASTER IN ROMANIA

Orthodox countries celebrate Easter this weekend – today is Easter Monday and most shops – even the chemists’ are closed. I went out to buy some vitamin B1 and C3 only to find all 5 chemists I tried closed.

The saving grace is that I lunch on the famous drob whose ingredients remind 
me of those of the Scottish delicacy, haggis – namely sheep stomach contents.
And lunch on Sunday was fish

Confession - another 15!

I confess – another 15 books

Statecraft – the new rules of power in a divided world Jack Watling (2026) This book is about how states compete in a dynamic contemporary environment.
It is about how they exert leverage and influence, how they can plan and manage
contingencies, when they may or may not be the most powerful actor, but do not
hold a majority of the power within the environment.
Crucially, this book is about how states can protect their interests and advance
their prosperity – partially at one another’s expense –without driving competitors
to escalate.
In short, it is hoped that the following chapters provide observations that are useful
in allowing NATO members to achieve better strategic outcomes through their
statecraft.
The Beginning Comes After the End – notes on a world of change Rebecca Solnit (2026)
– reviewed in The Guardian To Catch A Fascist – the fight to challenge the radical right Chris Mathias (2026)
A British journalist interviewed here World Builders – technology and the new geopolitics Bruno Macaes (2025) a Minister in
the Portugese government more than a decade ago and now a “geo-strategist”
– whatever that is Capitalism – a global history Sven Beckert (2025) Be warned - a 1,900 page tomb!! The Great Global Transformation – national market liberalism in a multi-polar world
Branko Milanovic (2025) a copy which lacks a bibliography A Theory of Complex Democracy – governing in the 21st Century D Innerarity (2025)
A Spanish political scientist The Age of Diagnosis – how our obsession with medical labels is making us sicker
Suzanne O’Sullivan (2025) A neurologist from the UK explains Crude Capitalism – oil, corporate power and the making of the world market
Adam Hannieh (2024). Looks very useful The Web of Meaning – integrating science and traditional wisdom Jeremy Lent (2021).
A book I want to spend some time with The Economic Naturalist – why economics explains almost everything Robert Frank (2008).
Looks my sort of text
My Stroke of Insight – a brain scientist’s personal journey Jill Taylor (2006)
A very personal account
Essays on the Garrison State Harold Lasswell (1997)
The US political scientist famous in the 1950s
Simple Rules for a Complex World Richard Epstein (1995) A book predicated on the
assumption that there are, in the US, too many lawyers and too may laws.
The World As I Found It Bruce Duffy (1987) a novel which explores the life of Moore,
Russell and Wittgenstein.

Sunday, April 12, 2026

ALL THE LATEST

This was the week I renewed my Romanian citizenship, entitling me to live in the country for the next three years. Anticipating a long wait - with gigantic queus at the HQ of the Immigration Ministry in Strada Militarie - we had first sought an interview with the Head of the Immigration Authority to plead our difficulties with downloading the relevant papers (some 8 in number). 

In the event, it proved to be a very useful decision – the whole process took about 
half an hour, although it will be a month before I receive the relevant certificate.

Friday, April 10, 2026

NEW READING

My latest -

Virtue Hoarders – the case against the PMC Catherine Liu (2021) The Professional Middle
Class is a concept which continues to fascinate me The Alibi of Capital – how we broke the earth to steal the future to build a better
future Timothy Mitchell (2026). A fascinating title for a fascinating book
The fragmentationist grand strategy Nel Bonilla - interesting article which covers
the next 2 books
The Grand Chessboard – american strategy and its socio-strategic imperatives
Z Brzezinski (1997) American Empire – the realities and consequences of US diplomacy Andrew Bacewich
(2002)
The Search for Modern China Jon Spence (2012) Any book on the subject is worth reading Jan Morris – a life Sarah Wheeler (2026). about a fascinating travel writer The Aristocracy of Talent – how meritocracy made the modern world Adrian Wooldridge
(2021). Novara interviews Adrian Wooldridge on his latest book “Centrists of the World,
Unite” (2026)
Twenty First Inequality and capitalism – Pikety, Marx and beyond ed L Langman (2018)
Promises great things
Antonio Gramsci – Beyond Marxism and Postmodernism R Holub (1992) This Is For Everyone - the unfinished story of the WWW Tim Berners-Lee (2025) the
great man of the web. review by Nik Carr Zbig – the life of Brzezinski, America’s great power prophet Edward Luce (2025) On Strategists and Strategy – essays 2014-24 Lawrence Freedman (2025) Freedman
senior – author of “on Strategy” - is always worth a read Ukraine and the Art of Strategy Lawrence Freedman (2019) Escape from Capitalism – an intervention Clara Mattei (2026) interview here
with Mattei Stephen Fry on his manic depression

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Recent books downloaded

Still a sense of ennui – although I should be pleased that, for the second time in the blog’s history, monthly clicks in March surpassed the 100,000 mark! (The previous month it was 33,000)

I’ve been doing a lot of viewing recently – mainly on the dangerous war on Iran 
in which Israel has embroiled the USA
Recent books downloaded Just Transitions – a roadmap to the Century ahead ed L Byrne (2020) 31 Network Propoganda, Manipulation, Disinformation and radicalization in US Politics
Y Binkler et al (2019)
30 Damn You, England – collected prose John Osborne (1994) Enough Said Alan Bennett (2026) My Diaries - 1888-1900 Wilfrid Blunt (1919) Travelling to Work - Diaries 1988-98 Michael Palin (2014) 50 Economics Classics Tom Butler-Bowen (2017) 50 Politics Classics Tom Butler-Bowen full book (2021) 50 Politics Classics - a summary Tom Butler-Bowen (2021) Triumph of the Will https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n15Uj6-vffI 1934 Haywire – the best of Craig Brown (2022) 29 Difference and Orientation – an Alex Kluge Reader ed LANGSTON (2019) The Revolutionary Temper – Paris 1748-89 Robert Darnton 2023 The Revolutionary Temper Robert Darnton (2023) sample 28 Democracy at Work – a cure for capitalism Richard Wolff (2012) Reverence – renewing a forgotten virtue Paul Woodruff (2001) The Room Where it Happened – a White House Memoir John Bolton (2020) The Economics of Poverty Martin Ravaillon (2016) Washington is Burning – corruption and lies in the age of Trump Andrew Cockburn (2026) 26 AJP Taylor – radical historian of Europe Chris Wrigley (2006) Notes Toward the Definition of Culture TS Eliot (2008)

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

RECENT READING

I have to confess to some ennui – as will be obvious to the long delays in recent posts. These are the recent book downloadings

and Geronimo de la Torre (2024)

The fall of the Soviet Union was hailed as the end of history. The onset of globalisation was hailed as the end of geography. The growth of artificial intelligence is being hailed as the end of human labour. The identification of the Anthropocene has become a warning for the end of humanity itself. When epochs are labelled and called into being, even if arbitrarily or retrospectively, it is always followed by claims of a crisis or death of something. Why, then, does the state seem to endure all these crises and deaths, sometimes coming out of them even stronger and more assured than before? The same state whose actions and inactions are at the very centre of so many crises and deaths, both literal and figurative? We live in a present era marked by a seemingly endless stream of crises that should, in principle, be solvable by states, but which are not; crises caused by economic crashes, environmental catastrophes, wars, famines, as well as everyday crises of culture, health or quality of life. The state is not singularly to blame for most of such crises, but it plays a central role in causing, exacerbating, or responding to them (often a combination of these roles).

That the state, with its vast resources and coercive power, seems unable or unwilling to substantially address the systemic problems that beset present society, yet still remains at the centre of our political imaginations, is evidence of its remarkable endurance and resilience. The many leftwing and decolonial projects that have attempted to reform the state across the globe in recent years are testament to the enchantment of the state as a space of political action, as well as its ability to quash radical change within its framework of ordering our worlds. This is not to say that they have not made positive material changes, but that those changes invariably fall far short of their intentions and very quickly become enveloped within its logics.

This is a book about how the idea of the state survives and maintains its ubiquity as the pivot of territorial organisation and order. However, it is also about how other stories of our world exist, and persist, in spite of it.

As anarchists have said for at least the last 150 years, we need a different imagination of how society could be governed if we are to save humanity and make our lives truly liveable, and the so-called ‘disaster anarchy’ of mutual aid and spontaneous self-organisation that erupts at times of crisis is testament to how this can feel so tantalisingly close. Even those who wish to reform the state, rather than overthrowing it, are already looking to new forms of governance that move beyond its limits. We therefore look to ‘other’ accounts of life that highlight ways of being and organising – forms of order amidst the disorder of state power – that can be used to decentre the state from our political and geographical imaginations and envision much wider future horizons that may include the state as one option but also vastly exceed it. We draw from otherwise very different disciplines – geography, archaeology, anthropology, cultural studies, philosophy and more – as well as multiple different cosmovisions and worldviews, some of which might even conflict or contrast with each other, to highlight the endurance and inventive resourcefulness of orders despite the state. The academic quest for perfect theoretical unity is rarely reflected in the messy realities of life.

Therefore, this book begins by asking: what if the state had never existed?


10
Christian Adam (2021) 
Y Jisheng (2020)
(2020)
9 
With every degree of temperature increase, roughly a billion people will be 
pushed outside the zone in which humans have lived for thousands of years. 
We are running out of time to manage the coming upheaval before it becomes 
overwhelming and deadly. Migration is not the problem; it is the solution. 

8
Yet, even then, at the height of its power, with the world seemingly at its feet, 
the ability of the US to achieve clearly stated goals at the end of the war, 
in countries that it thought were of vital interest, such as China, was shown to be 
shockingly weaker than expected. So, there was certainly no one standard of 
great power in World War II that might help us understand the power relationship 
between the states involved, and nor could the greatest of the   so-  called great 
powers in many   centuries –  the United   States –  achieve many of its goals.

6
Richard Finlay (2022)
Geoff Mulgan (2022)

This book is about the art and science of words that work. Examining the strategic and tactical use of language in politics, business, and everyday life, it shows how you can achieve better results by narrowing the gap between what you intend to convey and what your audiences actually interpret. The critical task, as I’ve suggested, is to go beyond your own understanding and to look at the world from your listener’s point of view. In essence, it is listener-centered; their perceptions trump whatever “objective” reality a given word or phrase you use might be presumed to have. Again, what matters isn’t what you say, it’s what people hear.

Dan Davies (2018)
the world lost its mind Dan Davies (2024)
Hans Ostrom and William Haltom (2019)

In our book as in this chapter we enter that meeting place to converse precisely, clearly, and honestly about “Politics and the English Language.”

To be honest, clear, and precise, we contend that the essay is a muddle—something its status and that of its author often obscure. In this chapter we show that most of the famed parts of the essay do not suit the whole as tightly as they might and that many parts entertain more than enlighten. The essay’s most momentous major claim is served poorly when it is served at all by such features as Orwell’s five “specimens,” by his catalogue of four “swindles and perversions,” by his six “rules,” and by his unnumbered gibes and gripes.

Labour Chris Baker et al (2009)
progressive politics Richard Carr (2019)
H Landemore (2020)
Thomas Merton and William Shannon (2000)