Available Formats
The Hidden Globe: How Wealth Hacks the World
By (Author) Atossa Araxia Abrahamian
Pan Macmillan
Picador
27th May 2025
20th February 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Corporate crime / white-collar crime
Popular economics
304.23
Hardback
336
Width 165mm, Height 241mm, Spine 32mm
542g
'This book did nothing less than make me re-see the world . . . Original, and very clever' - Sathnam Sanghera, author of Empireland
Borders draw one map of the world; money draws another. A journalists riveting account exposes a parallel universe exempt from the laws of the land, and how the wealthy and powerful benefit from it.
The map of the globe shows the world we think we know: sovereign nations that grant and restrict their citizens rights. Beneath, above, and tucked inside its neatly delineated borders, however, a parallel universe has been engineered into existence, consisting of thousands of extraterritorial zones that operate largely autonomously, increasingly for the benefit of the wealthy and powerful.
Atossa Abrahamian traces the rise of the hidden globe to thirteenth-century Switzerland, where poor cantons marketed the commodity they hadbodies, in the form of mercenary fighters. Following its evolution around the world, she reveals how prize-winning economists, eccentric theorists, visionary statesmen, and consultants masterminded its export in the form of free trade zones, flags of convenience, offshore detention centers where immigrants languish in limbo, and charter cities controlled by by foreign governments and multinational foreign corporationsand even into outer space, where tiny Luxembourg aspires to mining rights on asteroids.
By mapping the hidden geography that decides who wins and who loses in this new global orderand how it might be otherwiseThe Hidden Globe fascinates, enrages, and inspires.
'Atossa Abrahamian boldly renews our sense of reality and brilliantly illuminates our political impasse.' - Pankaj Mishra, author of The Age of Anger
This book did nothing less than make me re-see the world . . . Original, and very clever -- Sathnam Sanghera, author of Empireland
In describing insidiously interconnected global regimes of inequality and injustice, Atossa Abrahamian boldly renews our sense of reality and brilliantly illuminates our political impasse. -- Pankaj Mishra, author of The Age of Anger
Atossa Abrahamian is the ideal guidefluid, sharp-eyed, and thoughtfulto this hidden landscape. -- Daniel Immerwahr, author ofHow to Hide an Empire
A revelatory look at a globe-spanning collection of "offshore jurisdictions," "legal black holes," and "free zones" . . . an impressive achievement.' * Publishers Weekly *
Fascinatingreads like a novel yet packs a policy punch for anyone interested in global migration, licit and illicit corporate networks, legal fictions and realities . . . Read it, share it, and above all, reflect on the paradox that while we grapple with how to exert physical control over the digital world, we ignore the creation of vast new legal and physical spaces in plain sight. -- Anne-Marie Slaughter, CEO, New America, and Professor and Dean Emerita, Princeton University
Abrahamian begins by delving into the histories of contemporary tax havens . . . but her scope is far broader . . . -- Publisher's Weekly, STARRED review
Sharply observed . . . Abrahamian unravels the opaque world of special economic zones . . . Her well-researched, engrossing work manages the minutiae of several fields, including telecommunications, maritime law, and fine art, to stitch together a multilayered tale of how privilege works to protect itself. * Kirkus *
Vivid, revelatory . . . What bothers Abrahamian, in the end, isnt the anarchic but the unfair; if capital is free, people deserve the same respect -- Gideon Lewis-Kraus,The New Yorker
Atossa Araxia Abrahamian is a journalist whose writing has appeared in The New York Times, New York magazine, the London Review of Books, and other publications. The author of The Cosmopolites: The Coming of the Global Citizen and a 2024 New America National Fellow, she has worked as an editor at The Nation, an opinion editor at Al Jazeera America, and a reporter for Reuters. She grew up in Geneva and lives in Brooklyn.