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2021. 9. 18. 11:36

모과나무 목록

2021.1.1 ~2021.9.18.

1.

Sara Harper. 2016. How Population change will transform our world. Oxford University Press. 177 pages.

2.

David P. Barash. 2018. Through a Glass Brightly: Using Science to see our species as we really are. Oxford University Press.

3.

Alan Macfarlane. 2014. Invention of the Modern World. The Fortnightly Review. 322 pages.

4.

Calestous Juma. 2016. Innovation and its enemies: Why people resist new technologies. Oxford University Press. 316 pages.

5.

Dean Karlan and Jacob Appel. 2011. More than good intentions: Improving the ways the world's poor borrow, save, farm, learn, and stay healthy. Plume Books. 276 pages.

6.

Fredrik Erixon and Bjorn Weigel. 2016. The Innovation Illusion: how so little is created by so many working so hard. Yale University Press. 238 pages.

7.

Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt. 2018. How Democracies die. Crown. 231 pages.

8.

Samuel Huntington. 2006(1968). Political order in changing societies. Yale University Press. 461 pages.

9.

Roburt Kuttner. 2018. Can Democracy survive global capitalism. W.W.Norton. 309 pages.

10.

Richard Baldwin. 2016. The Great Convergence: Information Technology and the New Globalization. Belknap. 301 pages.

11.

Michael J. Sandel. 2020. The Tyranny of Merit: What's become of the common good? Farrar, Straus and Giroux. 227 pages.

12.

Johan Norberg. 2020. Open: The Story of Human Progress. Atlantic Books. 382 pages.

13.

Joel Mokyr. 1990. The Lever of Riches: Technological creativity and economic progress. Oxford. 304 pages.

14.

Benjamin Friedman. 2005. The Moral Consequences of economic growth. Vintage books. 436 pages.

15.

Charles Goodhart and Manoj Pradhan. 2020. The Great Demographic Reversal: Ageing societies, waning inequality, and inflation revival. Palgrave Macmillan. 218 pages. economy. Princeton University Press. 297 pages.

16.

Joel Mokyr. 2002. The Gifts of Athena: Historical orgins of the knowledge economy. Princeton University Press. 297 pages.

17.

Robert Bates. 2010. Prosperty and Violence: the political economy of development. Norton. 98 pages.

18.

Kevin Simler and Robin Hanson. 2018. The Elephant in the Brain: Hidden Motives in Everyday Life. Oxford University Press. 313 pages.

19.

Martin Seligman. 1990. Learned Optimism: How to change your mind and your life. Vintage. 292 pages.

20.

Mauro Guillen. 2020. 2030, How today's biggest trends will collide and reshape the future of everything. St.Martin's Press. 242 page.

21.

Ronald Inglehart. 2018. Cultural Evolution: People's motivations are changing, and reshaping the world. Cambridge. 216 pages. 

22.

Cesar Hidalgo. 2016. Why Information grows: The Evolution of order, from atoms to economies. Basic Books. 181 pages.

23.

Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson. 2006. Economic Origins of dictatorship and democracy. Cambridge. 379 pages.

24.

Martin Daly and Margo Wilson. 1988. Homicide. Aldine de Gruyter. 297 pages

25.

Robert Trivers. 2011. The Folly of Fools: The Logic of deceit and self-deception in human life. Basic Books. 340 pages.

26.

Stuart Firestein. 2012. Ignorance: How it drives science. Oxford University Press. 176 pages.

27.

Richard Haass. 2020. The World: A Brief instroduction. Penguin Press. 313 pages.

28.

Douglas Kenrick. 2011. Sex, Murder, and the meaning of life: A Psychologist investigates how evolution, cognition, and complexity are revolutionizing our view of human nature. Basic Books. 205 pages.

29.

Bobby Duffy. 2018. Why we're wrong about nearly everything: A theory of human misunderstanding. Basic Books. 241 pages.

30.

Geoffrey West. 2017. Scale: The Universal laws of life, growth, and death in organismx, cities, and companies. Penguin Books. 448 pages.

31.

Martin Daly and Margo Wilson. 1983. Sex. Evolution, and Behavior. Willard Grant Press. 344 pages.

32.

David Buss. 2019. Evolutionary Psychology: The New Science of the Mind. Routledge. 402 pages.

33.

William Baumol, Robert Litan, and Carl Schramm. 2007. Good Capitalism, bad capitalism, and the economics of growth and prosperity. Yale University Press.

34.

Annalee Saxenian. 1994. Regional advantage: Culture and competition in Silicon Valley and Route 128. Harvard University Press. 168 pages.

35.

Mark Zachary Taylor. 2016. The Politics of Innovation: Why some countries are better than others at science and technology. Oxford. 297 pages.

36.

Ian Morris. 2013. War! What is it good for?: Conflict and the progress of civilization from primates to robots. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. 393 pages.

37.

James Bessen. 2015. Learning by Doing: the Real connection between innovation, wages, and wealth. Yale University Press. 227 pages.

38.

Sherwin Nuland. 2007. The Art of aging: a Doctor's prescription for well-being. Random House. 290 pages.

39.

Jeffrey Winters. 2011. Oligarchy. Cambridge University Press. 285 pages.

40.

Alvin Roth. 2015. Who gets What - and Why: the new economics of matchmaking and market design. Mariner Books. 231 pages.

41.

William Easterly. 2001. The Elusive Quest for Growth: Economists' adventures and misadventures in the tropics. MIT Press. 291 pages.

42.

Robert Paxton. 2004. The Anatomy of fascism. Vintage books. 220 pages.

43.

Joseph Stiglitz. 2019. People, power, and profits: progressive capitalism for an age of discontent. 247 pages.

44.

Mancur Olson. 1982. The Rise and decline of nations: Economic growth, stagflation, and social rigidities. Yale University Press. 237 pages.

45.

Charles Tilly. 1990. Coercion, Capital, and European States. Blackwell. 227 pages.

46.

Amar Bhide. 2000. The Origin and Evolution of New Business. Oxford University Press. 370 pages.

47.

Sonja Lyubomirsky. 2007. The How of Happiness: a new approach to getting the life you want. Penguin press. 304 pages.

48.

Geoffrey Parker, Marshall Van Alstyne, and Sangeet Choudary. 2016. Platform Revolution: How networked markets are transforming the economy and how to make them work for you. W.W.Norton. 289 pages.

49.

David Evans and Richard Schmalensee. 2016. Matchmakers: the New economics of multisided platforms. Harvard Business Review press. 206 pages.

50.

Valcrav Smil. 2021. Grand Transitions: How the modern world was made. Oxford University Press. 296 pages.