Myand Abraham Newman's book, Underground Empire: How America Weaponized the World Economy, is published by Henry Holt in the US and Allen Lane/Penguin in the UK. See Foreign Affairs review, Washington Post review, Times Literary Supplement review, National Review review, Washington Monthly review, Financial Times review, Los Angeles Review of Books review, Irish Times review, Pluralistic review, Publisher's Weekly starred review, Chatham House review.
Our previous book, Of Privacy and Power: The Transatlantic Fight over Freedom and Security was the winner of the 2019 Chicago-Kent College of Law / Roy C. Palmer Civil Liberties Prize, the 2020 ISA-ICOMM Award, and one of Foreign Affairs' Best Books of 2019. I used to be the Editor-in-Chief of the Monkey Cage blog at the Washington Post.
My first major area of interest (with various co-authors) is how machine learning works as a machinery for social information processing. The picture is by Shaun Tan (it's one of the preparatory storyboards for The Lost Thing) and was used for the inside cover of the Daedalus issue on the new moral political economy, which includes The Moral Economy of High Tech Modernism, with Marion Fourcade. This short piece compares 21st century machine learning to 19th and 20th century bureaucracy - we hope to write more.
Behold the AI Shoggoth, with Cosma Shalizi, is a first cut at the relationship between LLMs, democracy, markets and bureaucracy. A longer and baggier essay expanding on this question (with no paywall) can be found here.
"Analytical Democracy: A Microfoundational Approach, with Hugo Mercier and Melissa Schwartzberg, provides the beginnings of a "no bullshit" approach to understanding democracy. For the pop version, see The New Libertarian Elitists, Democracy, Spring 2023.
Evolutionary Theory and Endogenous Institutional Change, with Danielle Allen and Cosma Shalizi, models different institutional trajectories of informational discovery in democratic and authoritarian regimes.
My third are of interest, with Abraham Newman, is what we call Weaponized Interdependence, starting with our article providing a structural theory of how information and economic networks enable state coercion. It's been a bit startling to see how this notion has spread.
My book with Abraham Newman, Of Privacy and Power: The Transatlantic Fight over Freedom and Security examines EU-US disputes over privacy and surveillance. This article which surveys recent work on the 'new interdependence,' as well as setting out our own ideas, came out in World Politics in Spring 2014.
The best part of my career as a blogger was putting together this seminar (made into a beautiful PDF by John Holbo) on Francis Spufford's wonderful book, Red Plenty. My Twitter handle is @henryfarrell, and my Pinboard feed is henryfarrell. Contact me at
myfirstname...@gmail.com.
I'm a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. I am also a research associate at Stanford CASBS, an affiliated scholar at Stanford University Law School's Center for the Internet and Society, and an international correspondent for Stato e Mercato.
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