Synopses & Reviews
Crossing lines of economics, politics, and family, this guide to 21st-century life offers new ways of engaging with the challenges of living in this expansive time. The dilemmas the book deals with are not only complex and systemic but also have far-reaching consequences for subsequent generations. Issues tackled include money and work, the environment, democracy, corporate power, and globalization. Intelligent without being alienating and credible without being academic, the text explores these issues and looks at their practical implications and productive solutions. Readers can move past worrying about the state of the world and into having concrete answers and implementable strategies for overcoming seemingly insurmountable personal obstacles. For all those who believe that living well in this century necessarily means being accountable to the next, this helpful book gives readers the tools to meet the challenges they face in a manner that can make the world a better place.
Review
"A humorous and provocative guide to our changing world and how to take it more seriously." Wisconsin State Journal
About the Author
Mike Hanley is an independent writer and journalist writing for
The Economist,
Financial Times, and Reuters, among others. Now based in Australia, he writes for
Fairfax Business Magazines in Australia and Asia and consults for a number of multinational companies.
Adrian Monck is the London-based editor of the critically acclaimed Channel 5 News in Australia. As a broadcast news journalist he has worked for CBS News, covering events from the fall of the Berlin Wall to the Gulf War.