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Niall Ferguson

The Square and the Tower: Networks, Hierarchies and the Struggle for Global Power

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  • Еркебұлан Аманғосовhas quoted4 years ago
    If I broke [my silence], the strength would depart from me; but while I held my peace, I held my foe in an invisible mesh.
  • xrumxrumhas quoted4 years ago
    When employees from different firms meet for alcoholic refreshments after work, they move from the vertical tower of the corporation to the horizontal square of the social network
  • xrumxrumhas quoted4 years ago
    Inside any large corporation there are networks quite distinct from the official ‘org. chart’.
  • xrumxrumhas quoted4 years ago
    Crucially, when a group of individuals meets, each one of whom has power in a different hierarchical structure, their networking can have profound consequences.
  • xrumxrumhas quoted4 years ago
    The wife of an Oxford contemporary who entered politics once complained to him about his long working hours, lack of privacy, low salary and rare holidays – as well as the job insecurity inherent in democracy. ‘But the fact that I would put up with all that,’ he replied, ‘just proves what a wonderful thing power is.’
    But is it? Is it better today to be in a network, which gives you influence, than in a hierarchy, which gives you power? Which better describes your own position? All of us are necessarily members of more than one hierarchical structure. We are nearly all citizens of at least one state. A very large proportion of us are employees of at least one corporation (and a surprisingly large number of the world’s corporations are still directly or indirectly state-controlled). Most people under the age of twenty in the developed world are now likely to be in one kind of educational institutional or another; whatever these institutions may claim, their structure is fundamentally hierarchical. (True, the president of Harvard has very limited power over a tenured professor; but she and the hierarchy of deans beneath her have a great deal of power over everyone else from the brightest junior professor to the lowliest freshman.) A
  • xrumxrumhas quoted4 years ago
    Entrepreneurship has suited my love of freedom, though I would say that I have founded companies more to remain free than to become rich. The thing I enjoy most is writing books about subjects that interest me.
  • xrumxrumhas quoted4 years ago
    I opted to become an academic because in my early twenties I strongly preferred freedom to money.
  • xrumxrumhas quoted4 years ago
    At one level, it is obvious why I was at that party. The fact that I have worked at a succession of well-known universities – Oxford, Cambridge, New York, Harvard and Stanford – automatically makes me part of multiple webs of college alumni. As a consequence of my work as a writer and professor, I have also joined a number of economic and political networks such as the World Economic Forum and the Bilderberg meetings. I am a member of three London clubs and one in New York. I presently belong to the boards of three cor
  • xrumxrumhas quoted4 years ago
    I presently belong to the boards of three corporate entities: one a global asset manager, one a British think tank, one a New York museum.
  • xrumxrumhas quoted4 years ago
    To the ambitious young insider, it is always worth going to the next party, no matter how late it is, for the sake of networking. Sleep may be appealing, but the fear of missing out is appalling. To the disgruntled old outsider, on the other hand, the word network has a different connotation. The suspicion grows that the world is controlled by powerful and exclusive networks: the bankers, the Establishment, the System, the Jews, the Freemasons, the Illuminati
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