The dictator's handbook why bad behavior is almost always good politics
Bueno de Mesquita, Bruce.
Smith, Alastair.
Notes
xxv, 319 pagesillustrations, maps.
Contents: Introduction: rules to rule by -- The rules of politics -- Coming to power -- Staying in power -- Steal from the poor, give to the rich -- Getting and spending -- If corruption empowers, then absolute corruption empowers absolutely -- Foreign aid -- The people in revolt -- War, peace, and world order -- What is to be done?
Summary: Two political scientists show how the rules of politics almost always favour leaders who ignore the national interest and focus on serving their own supporters. For eighteen years, political scientists Bruce Bueno de Mesquita and Alastair Smith have been part of a team turning the conventional wisdom of politics on its head. In "The Dictator's Handbook" they reveal their simple, crucial conclusion: leaders will do whatever it takes to stay in power. Simple as it may sound, this perspective uncovers surprising insights, lays bare the logic of politics, and explains nearly everything we need to know about how countries and corporations are run. Examining the successes and failures of autocrats, democrats, and CEOs alike, "The Dictator's Handbook" paints an incomparable and profoundly necessary portrait of how politics - and leadership itself - really works.
Custom 2
20170221173521.0| Location | edition | Bar Code | due date |
|---|---|---|---|
| Non Fiction | 1st ed. | CC19323 |
| Dewey: | 303.3 |
| call #: | BUE |
| ISBN: | 9781610391849 |
| pub: | 2012 |
| Type: | ![]() |
