Available Formats
Reckless Opportunists: Elites at the End of the Establishment
By (Author) Aeron Davis
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
13th March 2018
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
303.340941
Paperback
160
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
Aeron Davis looks at the growing crisis of leadership in Britain today. He argues that increasingly self-interested elites are not only damaging society they are destroying the basis of Establishment rule itself. The book, based on over 350 elite interviews, asks: how did we end up producing the leaders that got us here and what can we do about it -- .
An indispensable addition to elite scholarship that was decades in the making and arrives not a minute too soon. As the West continues to quake in the face of populist furore, Aeron Daviss deft analysis of his barbarians inside the gate shows an establishment torn asunder. Scholars and pundits trying to make sense of the establishment overthrow in the West will ignore Reckless opportunists at their own peril.
Janine R. Wedel, Professor in the Schar School of Policy and Government, George Mason University
Aeron Davis has spent two decades talking to members of the financial, political, and media elites and here he lines them all up to explain how theyve created the debacle that is Brexit Britain.
Aditya Chakrabortty, Senior Economics Commentator, The Guardian
Aeron Daviss new book on the Establishment re-writes the rules of the genre. He is a rare thing, a critical outsider who has managed to gain extensive insider access. His close-up accounts offer fascinating new insights into the apparent dysfunction of modern politics.
Iain Dale, political commentator, publisher, LBC broadcaster
Chaos often feels like the best word to describe the world my generation is inheriting. Reckless Opportunists shines a light on how the decay of the Establishment feeds that chaos. Its terrifying but it also gives me hope that a different and better world is possible.
Joe Earle, author of The Econocracy
Aeron Davis pulls back the curtain on the wizards of Oz who rule us. And having studied them for decades he tells their story brilliantly. They were never as good as we were led to
believe.
Danny Dorling, Professor of Geography, University of Oxford
Aeron Davis is Professor of Political Communication and Co-Director of the Political Economy Research Centre (PERC) at Goldsmiths, University of London