
Land Power
Who Has It, Who Doesn't, and How That Determines the Fate of Societies
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Narrated by:
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Braden Wright
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By:
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Michael Albertus
About this listen
An award-winning political scientist shows that a society’s path to prosperity, sustainability, and equality depends on who owns the land
For millennia, land has been a symbol of wealth and privilege. But the true power of land ownership is even greater than we might think. In Land Power, political scientist Michael Albertus shows that who owns the land determines whether a society will be equal or unequal, whether it will develop or decline, and whether it will safeguard or sacrifice its environment.
Modern history has been defined by land reallocation on a massive scale. From the 1500s on, European colonial powers and new nation-states shifted indigenous lands into the hands of settlers. The 1900s brought new waves of land appropriation, from Soviet and Maoist collectivization to initiatives turning large estates over to family farmers. The shuffle continues today as governments vie for power and prosperity by choosing who should get land. Drawing on a career’s worth of original research and on-the-ground fieldwork, Albertus shows that choices about who owns the land have locked in poverty, sexism, racism, and climate crisis—and that what we do with the land today can change our collective fate.
Global in scope, Land Power argues that saving civilization must begin with the earth under our feet.
©2025 Michael Albertus (P)2025 Basic BooksCritic reviews
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Blood and the Badge
- The Mafia, Two Killer Cops, and a Scandal That Shocked the Nation
- By: Michael Cannell
- Narrated by: Jonathan Yen
- Length: 14 hrs and 8 mins
- Unabridged
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No episode in NYPD history surpasses the depravities of Louis Eppolito and Stephen Caracappa, two decorated detectives who covertly acted as mafia informants and paid assassins in the Scorsese world of 1980s Brooklyn. For more than ten years, Eppolito and Caracappa moonlighted as the mob's early warning alert system, leaking names of mobsters secretly cooperating with the government and crippling investigations by sharing details of surveillance, phone taps, and impending arrests. The Lucchese boss called the two detectives his crystal ball: Whatever detectives knew, the mafia soon learned.
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amazing stories
- By robert l. on 04-02-25
By: Michael Cannell
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House of Huawei
- The Secret History of China's Most Powerful Company
- By: Eva Dou
- Narrated by: Nancy Wu
- Length: 11 hrs and 40 mins
- Unabridged
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On the coast of southern China, an eccentric entrepreneur spent three decades steadily building an obscure telecom company into one of the world’s most powerful technological empires with hardly anyone noticing. This all changed in December 2018, when the detention of Meng Wanzhou, Huawei Technologies’ female scion, sparked an international hostage standoff, poured fuel on the US-China trade war, and suddenly thrust the mysterious company into the global spotlight.
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Good description of how China understood the critical importance of telecom technology before other countries in the west
- By Juan C. Rodriguez on 02-19-25
By: Eva Dou
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Save Our Souls
- The True Story of a Castaway Family, Treachery, and Murder
- By: Matthew Pearl
- Narrated by: George Newbern
- Length: 5 hrs and 47 mins
- Unabridged
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On December 10, 1887, a shark fishing boat disappeared. On board the doomed vessel were the Walkers—the ship’s captain Frederick, his wife Elizabeth, their three teenage sons, and their dog—along with the ship’s crew. The family had spotted a promising fishing location when a terrible storm arose, splitting their vessel in two and leaving those onboard adrift on the perilous sea. When the castaways awoke the next morning, they discovered they had been washed ashore—on an island inhabited by a large but ragged and emaciated man who introduced himself as Hans.
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Awful
- By aleris on 02-11-25
By: Matthew Pearl
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The Granddaughter
- A Novel
- By: Bernhard Schlink
- Narrated by: Richard Burnip, Sarah Moule
- Length: 10 hrs and 14 mins
- Unabridged
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It is only after the sudden death of his wife, Birgit, that Kaspar discovers the price she paid years earlier when she fled East Germany to join him: she had to abandon her baby. Shattered by grief, yet animated by a new hope, Kaspar closes up his bookshop in present day Berlin and sets off to find her lost child in the east. His search leads him to a rural community of neo-Nazis, intent on reclaiming and settling ancestral lands to the East. Among them, Kaspar encounters Svenja, a woman whose eyes, hair, and even voice remind him of Birgit.
By: Bernhard Schlink
What listeners say about Land Power
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Diana_loves_audiobooks
- 03-06-25
Excellent! Extraordinary and should be a must read
Excellent! Extraordinary. Should be a must-listen/read for any student of politics, history, feminism, society... A completely different way of looking at our relationship and Connections to Land. Such a reset from what so many take as "normal." and Truly, Braden Wright does a brilliant job -- his narration makes this consistently very, very interesting and drew me right in. Great Work -- narrator and author Michael Albertus.
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- Hal
- 02-24-25
Great stories of what countries are doing that we never hear about. This is led by working with the people. Excellent…..
I learned much about how countries have struggled with equality and balance with nature. Super….
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1 person found this helpful
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- Vivek Oberoi
- 02-15-25
The book is a complete waste of time. Please don’t bother with it
Rare that one comes across a book that is an utter and complete of time. Why Daron Acemoglu liked it is beyond my comprehension.
Albertus has produced a scattered book with - at once - unconnected and overlapping tale of the dispossession of American Indians in California, Blacks in South Africa, Aboriginals in Australia, women in South America. That their story needs to be told is fine. But must it told with such little insight. Just damn facts arranged in sentences?
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