International Political Economy

This assignment is for my International Political Economy
Class, I want from you to write one page paper following the professor instructions below:

Here are the instructions from the professor:
Pick one book from the list below and write an overview about the book and why did you pick this book plus what you want to learn from this book by reading it and writing about it in the future in your book Appraisal paper which is due at the end of the semester.

– Make sure you write an overview about the book not a summary, you don’t need to read the whole book now you can read a summary about it if available online.
– Also, mention what is your expectation from this book like what you want to learn from it.
– Don’t forget to include two other books from the list that you want to compare and contrast with the first book you chose to write about in your book appraisal. You can just write the name of the books and the authors at the end of your book appraisal proposal. Also you can write briefly about the books (for example: the name of the book, the authors, the theme, and a few sentences about it in general) it’s up to you at the end be creative.
– All this must be in one page, no more than one page will be allowed.

Book Appraisal Suggestions books:

The Age of Supply: Overcoming The Greatest Challenge To The Global Economy by Daniel Alpert

Open Secret: The Global Banking Conspiracy That Swindled Investors Out of Billions by Erin Arvedlund

Europe’s Financial Crisis: A Shorty Guide To How The Euro Fell Into Crisis And The Consequences For The World

by John Authers

Poor Economics by Abhijit V. Banerjee and Easther Duflo

In Defence of Globalisation

by Jhagdish Bhagwhati

The Globalisation of Inequality by Francois Bourguignon

Economics: The User’s Guide

by Ha-Joon Chang

The Money Machine: How the City Works

by Philip Coggan

Globalising Capital: A History of the International Monetary System , Exorbitant Priviledge, and Hall of Mirrors

by Barry Eichengreen

The Ascent of Money

by Niall Ferguson

The Next 100 Years: A Forecast for the 21st Century

by George Freeman

Inequality and Instability and The End of Normal

by James K. Galbraith

That Used To Be Us by Thomas K. Friedman and

Michael Mandelbaum

The Undercover Economist

by Tim Harford

An End to Poverty? A Historical Debate

by Gareth Stedman Jones

Money: The Unauthorised Biography by Felix Martin

Capitalism and Modern Social Thought and The Third Way

by Anthony Giddens

The Map and The Territory 2.0: Risk, Human Nature, And The Future of Forecasting by Alan Greenspan

Network Power: The Social Dynamics of Globalisation

by David Singh Grewal

Global Community: The Role of International Organisations in the Making of the Contemporary World

by Akira Iriye

End This Depression Now

by Paul Krugman

The Geneva Consensus: Making Trade Work For All

by Pascal Lamy

Crisis in The Eurozone and Proftiting Without Producing: How Finance Exploits Us All

by Costas Lapavitsas

The Future of Power by Joseph Nye

The Little Big Number by Dirk Phlilipsen

Currency Wars: The Making of the Next Global Crisis

by James Rickards

The Globilization Paradox: Democracy and the Future of the World Economy

by Dani Rodrik

The Failure of Political Islam and Globalised Islam

by Olivier Roy

Crisis Economics: A Crash Course In The Future of Finance by Nouriel Roubini and Stephen Mihm

What Money Can’t Buy

by Michael J Sandel

Developement as Freedom and

The Idea of Justice

by Amartya Sen.

Irrational Exuberance

by Robert J. Shiller

One World by Peter Singer

The Roaring Nineties and The Price of Inequality

by Joseph Stiglitz

The Great Deformation: The Corruption of Capitalism in America by David A. Stockman

Misbehaving: The Making of Behavioral Economics

by Richard H. Thaler

The Age of Cryptography

by Paul Vigna and Michael J. Casey

Does Capitalism Have a Future?

by Immanuel Wallerstein, Randall Collins, Michael Mann, Georgi Derluguian and Craig Calhoun

Fixing Global Finance and The Shifts and The Shocks: What We’ve Learned-And Have Still To Learn-from the Financial Crisis

by Martin Wolf

Creating a World Without Power

by Muhammed Yunnas

• All reports will use Times New Roman font, 12 pitch and double line spacing. All written reports will consist of 1 page plus separate citations sheet.
• For all writing assignments the following shall apply: Completion of general requirements (above) – 60% / Grammar, spelling & sentence structure – 20% / Relativity of content – 20%

**This will be checked on Safe assign, and multiple databases to prevent plagiarism. Please be careful**

I hope this is everything that you need. Please let me know if you need anything.