Situating American Trumpism within a global story of the rise of antidemocratic politics in other big, diverse countries like Brazil and India,…[Bardhan] presents a sober contemplation of demagogues like Jair Bolsonaro and Narendra Modi, who weaken democracy with the support of disaffected electoral majorities.
-- Alexander Burns New York Review of Books
Ambitious…[This book] makes an important contribution to the burgeoning literature on the erosion of democracy worldwide.
-- Martin Wolf Financial Times
Bardhan argues that the ills plaguing the world are best understood not in terms of inequality but in terms of insecurity—simmering economic and social anxiety about job loss, declining incomes, poverty, and cultural change.
-- Daron Acemoglu Foreign Affairs
Not poverty, not inequality, but insecurity is at the root of the worldwide upsurge in populism and disenchantment with democracy. This is the main message of A World of Insecurity…[Bardhan’s] impressively comprehensive, richly informed and balanced book.
-- Philippe Van Parijs Brussels Times
Bardhan’s contribution to a growing body of literature on the phenomenon of disenchantment is particularly welcome as it not only contains piercing commentaries and fresh insights but also offers some workable solutions to this conundrum…The book hands us a great opportunity to bridge the widening gap between intellectual rigour and popular opinion.
-- Iman Kumar Mitra Telegraph India
Wide-ranging…Policy makers, labor activists, and economists will find much to chew on.
-- Publishers Weekly
[Bardhan] proposes that liberalism’s ethical principles—its normative claims—are still as palpable today in our present historical circumstances, in the political ruins we call neoliberalism and populism, as they were at their origin in the seventeenth century.
-- James Livingston Project Syndicate
A work of expansive ambition and breadth. In particular, the sweeping catalogue of proposals to relaunch social democracy…will offer food for thought to progressive thinkers around the world.
-- Alessandra Pelloni Journal of Economics
An accessible book, challenging but with impressive and topical examples.
-- Christine Shields Society of Professional Economists
In his bold new book [Bardhan] explains the rise of authoritarianism, in many cases driven, as he says, by populist demagogues—leaders who claim to embody the popular will and who, though they may emerge in formal democracies, then trample upon the rules and institutions of representative government.
-- John Harriss Today's Totalitarianism
A World of Insecurity well points out the critical issues of a world where democracy loses the postulate of the people’s participation in collective decision-making.
-- Albertina Nani History of Economic Thought and Policy
A significant contribution which weaves the economic, political, and social questions together…must be read by those interested in the erosion of democracy.
-- Aashita Dawer Jindal Global Law Review
In this important book, Pranab Bardhan explores how and why the insecurities of our age have metastasized into our democratic institutions. These cancers on democracy block the cooperation necessary for solution of all other major problems. Thus, they are arguably the most consequential developments of our times.
-- George Akerlof, 2001 Nobel Laureate in Economics
Pranab Bardhan is one of the wisest social scientists writing today, and the hallmarks of his writing are parsimony, clarity, and the depth of ideas. Indeed, the ratio of ideas to pages is among the highest in our field. A World of Insecurity is a panoramic book weaving together an analysis of the current economic and political crisis, acutely discussed by a master political economist.
-- John Roemer, Yale University
A World of Insecurity is an outstanding work. Bardhan tackles hard questions without illusions but also without becoming disillusioned.
-- Samuel Bowles, Santa Fe Institute, author of The Moral Economy: Why Good Incentives Are No Substitute for Good Citizens