Crunch Time: How Everyday Life is Killing the Future

Crunch Time: How Everyday Life is Killing the Future

by Adrian Monck (Author), Mike Hanley (Author)

Synopsis

Crunch Time features two award-winning journalists arguing about the impact of our unthinking everyday actions on the future of our world. Every age and every generation thinks it's special, that it's on the cusp of something big. This time it's true - it's Crunch Time, and what we do now will make or break the future. The problem is that the things that we do every day - drive to work, buy toys for our kids, prepare our meals, have a cup of coffee - are conspiring to break it. Terrorism, poverty, ecological meltdown, climate change, pandemics - this is the background noise we have all learnt to live with. But what if all these things could be laid at our own feet? What if our civilisation is structurally, tragically flawed? What if we are using up tomorrow today? Our society is moving faster than ever, yet it's also increasingly fragile and filled with risk. In Crunch Time , journalists Adrian Monck and Mike Hanley argue passionately with each other about the causes of these issues and what we can do about them. Believing that living in the 21st century means being answerable to the future, they help us to understand the critical decisions that we need to make now if we want to leave anything of value to future generations.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 256
Publisher: Icon Books
Published: 05 Apr 2007

ISBN 10: 1840468017
ISBN 13: 9781840468014

Author Bio
Adrian Monck grew up in the wilds of Norfolk and studied history at Exeter College, Oxford. On graduating he became a TV journalist with America's CBS News and later pioneered undercover reporting for News at Ten, worked at Sky News, and helped found and run Five News. He has an MBA from London Business School. Mike Hanley grew up in the eastern suburbs of Sydney, Australia, and later lived in Japan. After studying at the London School of Economics he became a journalist - interning at The Economist and launching and publishing International Risk Management for Emap. After going freelance he studied at the London Business School where he met Adrian Monck. He now lives back in Sydney with his young family.