<p>'Fascinating. Shows convincingly that Brexit was financed by hedge funds and alternative finance, and that their ultimate goal was to promote a new wave of financial deregulation and buy off our democratic institutions. A great piece of social sciences and a must-read'</p>
- Thomas Piketty, author of 'Capital in the Twenty-First Century',
<p>'A fresh and urgent agenda for social science research for years to come'</p>
- Johan Heilbron, Professor in the Sociology of Education at Uppsala University,
<p>'An unparalleled look into the class interests driving today's anti-democratic insurgency and its links with the authoritarian libertarianism of the hard right. Ground-breaking'</p>
- Melinda Cooper is based at the Australian National University,
<p>'A remarkable foray into the radicalisation of the political order inherent in our contemporary financial condition: an order for which remaining pockets of liberal democracy are no longer of use'</p>
- Fabian Muniesa, Professor at the Ecole des Mines de Paris,
<p>'Rare and empirically rich'</p>
- Contretemps,
<p>'A dark tale, announcing the new concept of an 'authoritarian libertarianism''</p>
- Mediapart,
<p>'This provocative opus remarkably demonstrates how conflicts among different fractions of capital were the key drivers of UK's recent Eighteenth Brumaire: Brexit'</p>
- Olivier Godechot, author of 'Wages, Bonuses and the Appropriation of Profit in the Financial Industry',