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John R. Weeks

    Unpopular Culture
    The Healthiest People on Earth
    A Research Guide to the Ancient World
    Population
    Economics of the 1%
    The Debt Delusion
    • The Debt Delusion

      • 216pages
      • 8 heures de lecture
      4,0(2)Évaluer

      ‘Governments should spend no more than their tax income.’ Most people in Europe and North America accept this statement as simple common sense. It resonates with the deeply engrained economic metaphors that dominate public discourse, from ‘living within your means’ to ‘balancing the budget’ – all necessary, or so conventional wisdom holds, to avoid the dangers of debt, taxation and financial ruin. This book shows how these homely metaphors constitute the ‘debt delusion’: a set of plausible-sounding yet false ideas that have been used to justify damaging austerity policies. John Weeks debunks these myths, explaining the true story behind public spending, taxation, and debt, and their real function in the management of our economies. He demonstrates that disputes about public finances are not primarily technical matters best left to specialists and experts, as many politicians would have us believe, but rather fundamentally questions about our true political priorities. Requiring no prior economic knowledge, this is an ideal primer for anyone wishing to cut through the rhetoric and misinformation that dominate political debates on economics and become an informed citizen.

      The Debt Delusion
    • Economics of the 1%

      • 227pages
      • 8 heures de lecture
      3,8(26)Évaluer

      How much do economists really know? In most cases, they claim to have profound knowledge but in fact understand little and obscure almost everything. This book exposes the myths of mainstream economics and explains why current policies fail to serve the interests of the vast majority of people in the United States, Europe and elsewhere. Instead, they serve the few, increasing inequality and poverty.

      Economics of the 1%
    • This text provides a clear, comprehensive treatment of key concepts such as fertility, mortality, migration, and population structure and characteristics. This edition has been updated throughout to reflect new trends and research.

      Population
    • A Research Guide to the Ancient World

      • 456pages
      • 16 heures de lecture

      A Research Guide to the Ancient World: Print and Electronic Sources is a partially annotated bibliography that covers the study of the ancient world, and closes the traditional subject gap between the humanities and the social sciences in this area of study. This book is the only bibliographic resource available for such holistic coverage.

      A Research Guide to the Ancient World
    • The Healthiest People on Earth

      • 357pages
      • 13 heures de lecture

      John Howard Weeks, award-winning columnist and grandson of Adventist prophet Ellen G. White, offers a book full of exclusive family stories, secrets and recipes, the book tells how anyone, anywhere, can live a healthier, longer life by eating like an Adventist.

      The Healthiest People on Earth
    • Unpopular Culture

      The Ritual of Complaint in a British Bank

      • 176pages
      • 7 heures de lecture

      When you start a new job, you learn how things are done in the company, and you learn how they are complained about too. Unpopular Culture considers why people complain about their work culture and what impact those complaints have on their organizations. John Weeks based his study on long-term observations of the British Armstrong Bank in the United Kingdom. Not one person at this organization, he found, from the CEO down to the junior clerks, had anything good to say about its corporate culture. And yet, despite all the griping—and despite high-profile efforts at culture change—the way things were done never seemed fundamentally to alter. The organization was restructured, jobs redefined, and processes redesigned, but the complaining remained the same.As Weeks demonstrates, this is because the everyday standards of behavior that regulate complaints curtail their effectiveness. Embarrass someone by complaining in a way that is too public or too pointed, and you will find your social standing diminished. Complain too loudly or too long, and your coworkers might see you as contrary. On the other hand, complain too little and you may be seen as too stiff or just too strange to be trusted. The rituals of complaint, Weeks shows, have powerful social functions.

      Unpopular Culture