Jason Hickel is an award-winning professor of anthropology at the London School of Economics. His research focuses on globalization, development, and political economy, and he writes regularly for the Guardian. He lives in London.
"Advocates a strategy of development focused less on material
consumption and more on meeting the basic human needs. Accessible
to all readers, Hickel's revealing and sometimes angry critique
will spur deeper thought about the inequities of the global
economy."
*Library Journal (starred)*
"Penetratingly explores those forces that perpetuate global
inequality and shreds the notion that the fissure between rich and
poor is anything other than intentional."
*Publishers Weekly*
"Sharply argued. . . . Sure to distress the neoliberals in the
audience but a powerful case for reform in the cause of economic
justice."
*Kirkus Reviews*
"An evolutionary leap in our understanding of inequality and
poverty. [The Divide] should be required reading for anyone hoping
to realize a better world."
*Alnoor Ladha, Greenpeace*
"In this iconoclastic book, Jason Hickel shakes up the prevailing
paradigm of ‘development.’ . . . [The Divide] will radically change
the way in which you understand the workings of the global economic
system and the challenges faced by poor countries trying to advance
within it."
*Ha-Joon Chang, University of Cambridge, author of 23 Things They
Don’t Tell You about Capitalism and Economics: The User’s
Guide*
"A book that crackles with facts, indignation, and heart. Why
hasn’t global poverty and hunger really declined in the last
decades?…Journalists, aid workers, and anybody who has ever given
aid (i.e., nearly everybody) should read this book."
*Antony Loewenstein, author of Disaster Capitalism*
"The Divide is exceptional, necessary, and essential…Written in a
captivating and easy-to-read style, this book must become the
standard text for everyone studying, working, or interested in
development."
*Firoze Manji, editor of African Awakening: The Emerging
Revolutions*
"With passion and panache, Jason Hickel tells a very different
story of why poverty exists, what progress is, and who we are. The
Divide is myth busting at its best."
*Danny Dorling, author of Inequality and the 1%*
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