The International Relations of the North-South Divide
Historical Inequality, Contemporary Disagreement and World Politics
Available open access digitally under a CC-BY-NC-ND license. This book examines the significance of both historical and contemporary inequality in shaping diplomatic disagreements in international relations.

Psychoanalysis and Human Resource Management
A Depth Analysis
Human Resource Management has grown in influence, yet critical examinations remain rare. This book applies psychoanalytic ideas to challenge its core theories, exposing the darker sides of organizational life. Moving beyond Freud and Lacan, it offers fresh insights, reshaping HRM as both a field and practice.

Governing Migration and Mobility
Military-Humanitarianism at Brazil's Northern Frontier
This book examines the military-humanitarian strategies used to manage the movement of refugees, focusing on the Venezuelan migration crisis in northern Brazil. Shedding light on the intersecting logics of aid, security and vulnerability, it reveals the embodied experiences of migration in precarious environments.

Skills Policy in Britain and the Future of Work
A Historical Political Analysis
This book examines the evolution of UK skills policy from the 1881 Royal Commission on Technical Instruction to the present day, revealing how shifting political ideologies have shaped workforce development. It challenges conventional thinking and offers insights into how future skills policies can be more effective.

Race, Coloniality and the Academy
An Ethnography
How do academic spaces perpetuate racial and religious inequalities, and what can be done to challenge them? This bold book explores British South Asian Muslim identity, unpacks Islamophobia and sparks conversations about inequality in higher education.

Liberation and Corruption
Why Freedom Movements Fail
Why are liberation and independence movements often betrayed when their leaders get into government? Peter Hain offers a gripping exploration of why they often succumb to bad governance and corruption once in power, using global examples ranging from Africa to Latin America, Russia, the Caribbean, and Malaysia.

Inherited Time
A Hauntological History of Work in Educational Vocations
This book explores how the past and future shape our work and aspirations. Offering a fresh perspective on navigating careers amid precarity and planetary crises, this is essential reading for academics, students and anyone rethinking work.

UberTherapy
The New Business of Mental Health
UberTherapy is the essential guide to the rise of digital therapy for anyone working in, researching or using mental health services. Arguing for the irreplaceable value of human therapists, this book offers a roadmap to preserve real therapy in an increasingly digital world.

From the Bog to the Cloud
Dependency and Eco-Modernity in Ireland
This provocative book exposes the colonial roots of tech-driven climate policies and highlights global resistance to resource extraction through Ireland’s land-based struggles.

Exemplarity in Global Politics
Available open access digitally under CC-BY licence. How is political change claimed and recognized? How is it attached to responsible actors and transferred between them? This volume explores a mechanism that is celebrated in liberal discourse but is trickier in practice: the performance and uptake of examples.

Colonial Legacies and Global Inequalities in the Anglo-Caribbean
Negotiating Social Knowledge Production in Research and Career-Making
This book examines how Anglo-Caribbean scholars navigate global inequalities and colonial legacies in their research and career-making. Drawing on interviews and fieldwork, it offers an empirical and practice-based approach to global asymmetries in academia.

Youth, Transitions and Social Justice
Researching Spaces of Social Action
This book considers young people’s conceptions of social justice and offers inspiring insights into their approaches to challenging injustices.
