Books

The Currency Cold War: Cash and Cryptography, Hash Rates and Hegemony

£18.99
ByDavid Birch

Money is changing and this may mean a new world order. David Birch sets out the economic and technological imperatives of digital money, discussing the potential impact of it and the political tensions involved, as a contribution to the debate that we must have to shape the International Monetary and Financial System of the near future.

Gaming Trade: Win–Win Strategies for the Digital Era

£14.99
ByJack Harding, Rebecca Harding

Trade is no longer just the ships, planes and lorries that move the goods we buy around the world or the services we consume either physically or digitally. This book examines the US, Chinese and Russian approaches to `strategic trade’ and argues that Europe must adapt or lose out.

The Weaponization of Trade: The Great Unbalancing of Politics and Economics

£9.99
ByJack Harding, Rebecca Harding

Trade is being weaponized – and this isn’t good. As politicians on both sides of the Atlantic raise the stakes, trade is increasingly a tool of coercion to achieve strategic influence. This book looks at the risks for us all as trade becomes an instrument of foreign policy, and shows how politicians could turn things around.

Britain’s Cities, Britain’s Future

£9.99
ByMike Emmerich

Why did Britain’s cities, once the engines of the industrial revolution, decline so severely? What needs to be done if our cities are once again to be the drivers of our economy? This book answers these questions, looking at the lessons of the last two hundred years.

The Legal Team of the Future: Law+ Skills

£25.00
ByAdam Curphey

The Legal Team of the Future is the definitive guide to understanding and building the holistic skills required of those working in legal services now and in the future. Highlighting the importance of multidisciplinary teams working collaboratively to solve legal problems, the book introduces a ‘Law+’ model for the profession.

A European Just Transition for a Better World

£21.50
ByDirk Holemans (ed.)

What kinds of policies does Europe need to make the green economic transition in an equitable way, ensuring that the rights of all are guaranteed in an inclusive society? And how does this translate into the divergent realities of different regions in Europe, and in the Global South? Published in association with the Green European Foundation.

Good To Go? Decarbonising Travel After the Pandemic

£16.99
ByDavid Metz

This book offers a comprehensive overview of the transport system. It looks at how it has developed, at how it will need to evolve to meet our need for travel – sustainably and economically – and at what our options are for meeting those needs.

Travel Fast or Smart? A Manifesto for an Intelligent Transport Policy

£9.99
ByDavid Metz

This book sets out the principles that could underpin a strategic policy for transport. Instead of focusing piecemeal on trying (and failing) to get from place to place ever faster, we need to think about how and where we want the economy to develop, and about how new the digital technologies can help achieve this.

Are Trams Socialist? Why Britain Has No Transport Policy

£9.99
ByChristian Wolmar

If you have ever wondered why the roads are congested, the trains are full and the buses are no longer running, this book provides the answers. The UK has never had a proper transport policy and it desperately needs one to address the twin challengers of getting people around cheaply and safely, while safeguarding the environment.

A Better Politics: How Government Can Make Us Happier

£9.99
ByDanny Dorling

This book looks at the evidence for a successful politics that would promote happiness and health. It suggests policies that take account of this evidence. Government can and should work to make us happier.

The Itinerant Economist: Memoirs of a Dismal Scientist

£14.99
ByRussell Jones

A fly on the wall, warts and all, description of what it was like to be a market economist during the extraordinary 25-year period that finance came to exert a disproportionate influence on the lives of almost everyone on the planet. It was quite a ride and not without its moments of pathos and humour.

Diseased, Douched and Doctored: Thermal Springs, Spa Doctors and Rheumatic Diseases

£19.99
ByRoger Rolls

Focusing on Britain’s premier spa at Bath, this book examines how and why ‘taking the waters’ was regarded as an efficacious therapy by both patients and practitioners; and how and why Bath’s Mineral Water Hospital, one of the earliest voluntary hospitals to be established in the UK, ultimately became a world-renowned centre for the study and treatment of rheumatic diseases.

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