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Politics |
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Scroogenomics: Why You Shouldn't Buy Presents fof the
Holidays Waldfogel, Joel Princeton HB 9780691142647 $14.95 Joel Waldfogel first encountered Christmas after he’d become
an economist. Seeing it through fresh (and specifically trained) eyes, he was
horrified by what he saw: ‘a large and organised institution for value
destruction’. He argues (and proves, with detailed social research) that most
of our gifts miss the mark – it’s rare that anyone receives a gift that
is exactly what they would have chosen themselves. Yet, seasonal gift
exchange is firmly entrenched in cultures around the world. What to do? After
a curiously intriguing, highly informative journey through the economics and
social value of gift giving, liberally spiced with humour, this book offers a
handful of helpful and sane solutions, including gift cards and charity
donations. |
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Superfreakonomics: A tale of altruism, terrorism and poorly paid prostitution Levitt, Steven and Dubner, Step Allen Lane PB 9780713999914 $32.95 Here at
last is the long-awaited sequel to the international bestseller Freakonomics (Penguin. PB. $24.95). Steven Levitt, the
original rogue economist, and co-author Stephen Dubner
have been working hard, uncovering the hidden side of even more controversial
subjects, from charity to terrorism and prostitution. And with their
inimitable style and wit, they take us on another gripping journey of
discovery. They reveal, among other things, why you are more likely to be
killed walking drunk than driving drunk; how a prostitute is more likely to
sleep with a policeman than be arrested by one; why terrorists might be
easier to track down than you would imagine; how a sex change could boost
your salary; and how there really is a cheap fix for climate change. |
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The Value of Nothing:
Markets & Democracy in a Time of Crisis Patel, Raj Black Inc PB 9781863954563 $24.95 Oscar Wilde
put it perfectly: ‘people know the price of everything and the value of
nothing’. Leading off with this much-quoted aphorism from The Picture of
Dorian Gray, Raj Patel discusses the thinking that led to the global recession
and the economics lesson we all had to have. Conversational, discursive and
engaging, he dips into economics, history and philosophy to analyse the true
cost of the way we live now. The author of Stuffed and Starved (Black Inc.
PB. $27.95), a study of the global food system, Patel argues that the price
we pay for goods and commodities reflects neither their true value nor their
real cost. His call for new thinking and a fairer, more compassionate and
sustainable future exposes the truth behind free market economics, carbon
trading and globalisation. |
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HIGHLIGHT The Accidental Guerrilla:
Fighting Small Wars in the Midst of a Big One Kilcullen, David Scribe PB 9781921372537 $35.00 Military
strategist Kilcullen takes us on the ground to
uncover the face of modern warfare, discussing both the global ‘War on
Terrorism’ and small wars across the world. |
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HIGHLIGHT Balibo Joliffe, Jill Scribe PB 9781921372773 $29.95 An updated
edition of the book that was originally published as Cover-Up, and on which
the film Balibo is based. |
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HIGHLIGHT Fit to Print:
Misrepresenting the Middle East Luyendijk, Joris Scribe PB 9781921372674 $29.95 Dutch
journalist Joris Luyendijk
demonstrates the ways in which the media gives us a filtered, altered and
manipulated image of reality in the Middle East. |
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HIGHLIGHT The Life and Death of
Democracy Keane, John Simon & Schuster HB 9780743231923 $50.00 Keane
confronts readers with a fresh and irreverent look at the past, present and
future of democracy, posing tough and timely questions along the way. |
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HIGHLIGHT Our Choice:
A Plan to Solve the Climate Crisis Gore, Al Bloomsbury PB 9780747590989 $35.00 The author
of An Inconvenient Truth (Bloomsbury. PB. $35) proposes solutions to the
problems of climate change – personal, political and in international
law. |