
Reviews of books on economics, history, technology, public policy, industry, institutions and organisations.
| Platform | Pricing | Only free issues | Publishes | Weekly | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Issues | 20 | Subscribers | Read | nonfictionreviews.substack.com |
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There is a conventional, widely held and well-understood story about the progress of humanity from pre-history to the present. After starting as a hunter-gatherer society after the end of the last ice age around 15,000 BCE, the beginning of...
The late anthropologist David Graeber and the archaeologist David Wengrow’s book The Dawn of Everything is a history of humanity from 40,000 years ago. The authors want to demolish the ‘prejudices, dressed up as facts, or even as laws of hi...
Three and a half decades after the end of the Cold War, geopolitics and great power rivalry are back with a vengeance. The CRINK group of China, Russia, Iran and North Korea is challenging the US-led alliances of NATO, the Quad, and ANZUS. ...
There is a notion that science fiction is a form of future history, that science-based hard SF predicts future technology. This is almost entirely wrong. Issac Asimov’s robots had positronic brains and obeyed the three laws of robotics, Art...
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The writers behind this newsletter.
I taught construction economics at University of NSW, University of Technology Sydney and Bartlett School of Sustainable Construction. Books include Modern Construction Economics and Creative Destruction and Construction of the Built Environment.
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