Brian Klaas grew up in Minnesota, earned his DPhil at Oxford, and is now a professor of global politics at University College London. He is a contributing writer for The Atlantic, host of the award-winning Power Corrupts podcast, and frequent guest on national television. Klaas has conducted field research across the globe and advised major politicians and organizations including NATO and the European Union.
Illuminating . . . reveals why some people and systems are more
likely to be corrupted by power than others
*Adam Grant*
Passionate, insightful, and occasionally jaw-dropping . . .
Corruptible sets out the story of the intoxicating lure of power -
and how it has shaped the modern world
*Peter Frankopan*
A brilliant exploration . . . This book builds Brian Klaas'
reputation, offering an essential guide through our world of
democratic decay, corruption, and cronyism
*Dan Snow*
Klaas is the rarest of finds: a political scientist who can also
tell great stories. He mixes memorable anecdotes with stern
analysis to tackle one of the biggest questions of all: do we have
to be ruled by bad people?
*Peter Pomerantsev*
A GPS system for navigating a world increasingly full of illiberal
democracies, modernised dictatorships, and populists who care only
for power . . . The power-hungry don't ask why, they only ask why
not
*Garry Kasparov, Chairman of the Renew Democracy Initiative and the
Human Rights Foundation*
A fascinating, fun read . . . Klaas has striking insights, presents
impeccable science accessibly, and tells terrific stories-all with
great writing and wonderfully mordant humor
*Robert Sapolsky, author of Behave*
The Freakonomics of political science
*Max Boot, Washington Post columnist*
A MAGNIFICENT BOOK THAT IS AS RIVETING AS A CRIME STORY
*Peter Turchin, author of Ultrasociety*
An extraordinary interrogation of the workings of power . . . A
critical book for these troubling times. A must read!
*Eddie S. Glaude Jr., author of Begin Again*
Engrossing, thought-provoking, and funny . . . An important
exploration of how ordinary people can keep leadership out of the
hands of monsters
*Heather Cox Richardson, author of How the South Won the Civil
War*
Rich insights and fascinating observations . . . [Shines] a light
on recent efforts to ensure that the corrupt don't get power, and
the incorruptible do
*Richard Stengel*
Surrounded by people, companies and organisations that abuse their
power, we've never needed Brian Klaas's penetrating study more. He
has amassed a rich collection of evidence to offer some hope that
we can pick better leaders and hold them to account
*Polly Toynbee*
Powerful, authoritative, humane and utterly compelling. This is a
book of big ideas, written with nuance and dynamism. When you turn
the last page, you realise that you'll never look at the world
quite the same way again
*Ian Dunt*
Fun and entertaining . . . With a deft literary hand, Klaas
describes how positions that offer power and possibilities for
enrichment feature incentives that attract the wrong sort of
people
*Washington Post*
A compelling enquiry into power, its abuse, and why the wrong
people wield it, by a learned and invigorating storyteller
*Nigella Lawson*
UNEXPECTED INSIGHTS . . . presented in a digestible and accessible
way...Maybe the most important lesson of Corruptible is that when
psychopaths inadvertently reveal their true selves, the
institutions that they plague must take action that is swift,
brutal and merciless
*Business Insider*
Absorbing, provocative, far-reaching . . . Essential for
interpreting history and world events-both the province of
tyrants-alike
*Kirkus Reviews*
ENRICHED BY COLORFUL CASE STUDIES AND LUCID EXPLANATIONS . . . a
nuanced and entertaining guide to the meaning and function of
power
*Publishers Weekly*
A NEW, INSIGHTFUL, AND SEDITIOUS ROADMAP TO THE PRIMAL URGE TO
DOMINATE . . . Dangerous as a drug addition, power changes both
those who have it and those who just want a quick fix
*Richard Engel, Chief Foreign Correspondent of NBC News*
Klaas is an entertaining guide who has read widely across different
fields and is able to connect his findings insightfully and
judiciously . . . From parliaments to executive suites, the world
could benefit from innovative systems designed in the way that
Brian Klaas lays out with clarity and passion
*Charles King, The TLS*
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