I’m interested in learning more about authoritarianism, specific (arguably) authoritarian regimes (especially China, Russia, and North Korea), democratic backsliding, the possibility of stable and/or global totalitarianism, and related topics.
As such, I’d be interested in:
- people’s thoughts on which books that are relevant to those topics might be worth reading or might be worth skipping
- links to good summaries/reviews/notes about relevant books
(ETA: I'd also be interested in recommendations of online courses or lecture series on these topics.)
I imagine such a collection could be useful for other people too. I’ll also share the relevant books and links that I know about already. (One type of book I don’t already know of examples of is biographies of relevant political leaders; please feel free to recommend some biographies of that kind!)
The cluster of topics I’m pointing to is intentionally broad. If you’re not sure whether a book/link is relevant enough, please mention it anyway, and just say something about what the book/link seems relevant to.
(See also Books / book reviews on nuclear risk, WMDs, great power war? and Collection of sources related to dystopias and "robust totalitarianism".)
Thanks! Both books do sound interesting.
Though the author's Wikipedia page and the Wikipedia page for The Road to Unfreedom seem to suggest the author often gets mixed/negative reviews from other scholars. But it's hard to say what to make of that without more thoroughly checking the ratio of positive to negative reviews or actually reading the reviews. And I guess he's writing on unusually controversy-prone topics.
I think I'll listen to the On Tyranny audiobook (since it's under 2 hours), and watch a talk from him on The Road to Unfreedom, and decide after that whether it's worth reading the full latter book or another book by him.
I assume you mean he's looking at the topics I pointed to other than the risk of stable and/or global authoritarianism? Or do you also know of work he's done that seems to have that specifically in mind in a level-headed way? (I say "in a level-headed way" because I'd guess some authors will say things that sound like they're about stable and/or global authoritarianism but aren't really thought through much, and are more like hyperbole.)