Adrian Wooldridge
Adrian Wooldridge is the Management Editor and 'Schumpeter' columnist for The Economist magazine. Until July 2009 he was The Economist's Washington Bureau Chief and 'Lexington' columnist.
Wooldridge was educated at Balliol College, Oxford, where he studied modern history, and was awarded a fellowship at All Souls College, also at Oxford University, where he received a doctorate in philosophy in 1985. From 1984 to 1985 he was also a Harkness Fellow at the University of California at Berkeley.[1]
Bibliography
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- Wooldridge, Adrian (1994). Measuring the mind : education and psychology in England c.1860-1990. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- — (April 18, 2015). "Family companies". Special Report. The Economist. 415 (8934).[2]
- — (April 18, 2015). "A very British business : some lessons from the success of Britain's elite private schools". Schumpeter. The Economist. 415 (8934): 56.
Co-wrote (with fellow Economist journalist John Micklethwait):
- The Witch Doctors: Making Sense of the Management Gurus
- The Company: A Short History of a Revolutionary Idea
- A Future Perfect: The Challenge and Promise of Globalization
- The Right Nation: Conservative Power in America
- God is Back: How the Global Revival of Faith Is Changing the World
References
- ↑ Speaker profile at Leigh Bureau
- ↑ The Economist often changes the title of a print article when it is published online. This article is titled "To those that have" online.
External links
- Journalist profile at The Economist
- Adrian Wooldridge's final Lexington column
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