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Human-centred storytelling that helps explain how complex systems shape everyday life
Spotlight Stories


St Kitts: Sugar, Citizenship, and the Small-Island Economics of Reinvention
St Kitts, a small Caribbean island nation in the federation of Saint Kitts and Nevis, is often remembered by visitors for its beaches, cruise ships, and the famous green monkeys that wander freely across the landscape. Yet the island’s real story is far deeper. St Kitts represents a fascinating example of how small economies adapt over time, shifting from agriculture to tourism, finance, and international investment in order to survive in a globalised world. For centuries, th


The Container That Rebuilt Global Trade
Few inventions have reshaped the modern economy as dramatically as the shipping container. At first glance it appears to be nothing more than a large metal box. Yet this standardised unit has quietly reorganised global trade, urban land use, logistics systems, and even architecture. What looks like a simple container is in fact one of the foundational building blocks of the modern commercial world. The modern container system traces its origins to American entrepreneur Malcom


What Are People Really Paying For in Champagne?
At first glance, the price differences between sparkling wines can appear difficult to explain. A bottle of Prosecco or Cava may cost a fraction of a comparable bottle of Champagne, despite all being sparkling wines made from grapes and produced through fermentation. For consumers, the question often arises: what justifies the premium attached to Champagne? The answer lies not only in production methods or quality perceptions, but in a complex system of economic, cultural, an

How Do Systems Shape Everyday Life?
From housing and healthcare to food, travel, and technology, Stories of Business examines the systems and incentives behind the things we take for granted.

The Hidden Systems Behind Everyday Life
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The Air Fryer Revolution: How a Kitchen Appliance Changed Modern Cooking
Few kitchen appliances have spread through households as rapidly as the air fryer. Within just a few years, air fryers moved from novelty gadgets to everyday kitchen infrastructure across millions of homes. In supermarkets, electronics stores and online marketplaces, shelves filled with competing models promising healthier chips, faster cooking, lower energy use and restaurant-style crispiness with minimal oil. What looked initially like another short-lived cooking trend quic


The Driveway Economy: How Private Parking Shaped Modern Life
Driveways rarely attract much attention. People use them every day without thinking deeply about them. Cars are parked. Deliveries arrive. Children play basketball. Bins are wheeled out for collection. Someone washes their vehicle on a Sunday morning. Life moves quietly across a small strip of private land connecting homes to roads. Yet the driveway is one of the most revealing pieces of infrastructure in modern society. It sits at the intersection of housing, car ownership,


Where Society Goes to Move: The Global System of Leisure Centres
In the United Kingdom, they are commonly called leisure centres. Across the United States, similar spaces are often known as recreation centres, community centres, fitness clubs or YMCA facilities. In parts of Europe, they may appear as sports complexes, aquatic centres or wellness centres. In China, large municipal sports centres dominate many cities. In the Gulf states, luxury fitness and wellness clubs increasingly combine gyms, spas and social spaces under one roof. In Ug


From Driveways to Highways: The Economy of Paving
Most people rarely think about paving until something goes wrong. A pothole appears after heavy rain. A driveway begins to crack. Floodwater gathers across a road because drainage failed underneath. Suddenly the surface beneath everyday life becomes visible again. Yet paving is one of the most important systems shaping modern civilisation. Roads, pavements, airport runways, shopping centres, industrial yards, school compounds, ports, courtyards and suburban driveways all depe


Smoke, Cattle and Identity: How Texas Built a Barbecue Economy
Texas barbecue is often presented as food. Brisket sliced onto butcher paper. Smoke rising from offset smokers. Long queues outside roadside restaurants. Picnic benches, cowboy hats, pickup trucks and trays of meat shared across crowded dining halls. But beneath the smoke sits a much larger system. Texas barbecue is tied to cattle ranching, migration, fuel supply chains, tourism, road infrastructure, family businesses, social media, labour, identity and the economics of moder


Cooking as Survival, Labour and Culture
Cooking is one of the oldest systems humans ever built. Long before factories, financial markets, schools, offices or modern states, people gathered around heat and learned how to transform raw ingredients into something safer, softer, tastier and more nourishing. Fire changed human civilisation physically and socially. It altered digestion, survival, migration, labour, family structure and eventually entire economies. Cooking is not merely food preparation. It is infrastruct


Gardens, Yards and Compounds: Why Humans Keep Fighting for Outdoor Space
Outdoor space changes the meaning of home. A small garden behind a terraced house in London, a compound in Kampala, a courtyard in Marrakech, a suburban backyard in Texas or a balcony garden in Singapore may look completely different physically, yet they often serve similar human functions. They create breathing room between the individual and the outside world. They offer privacy, identity, flexibility and a sense of control over space itself. Few parts of domestic life reve


Pottery and the Human Skill of Shaping Earth
Pottery is one of the oldest work skills still surviving in modern life. Long before factories, plastics, industrial packaging or global retail systems, humans were shaping clay into bowls, jars, plates, cooking pots and storage vessels using little more than earth, water, heat and touch. Across thousands of years, pottery became deeply tied to food, trade, religion, architecture, migration and survival itself. Few work skills connect human hands to civilisation as directly a


Sailing and the Systems That Taught Humans to Read the World
Sailing is one of humanity’s oldest ways of turning uncertainty into movement. Before engines, aviation, satellites and container shipping, people crossed water by learning to work with wind, current, stars, coastlines, ropes, timber, canvas and judgement. Sailing was never simply about boats. It was a system of survival, trade, exploration, migration, warfare, fishing, empire, sport and imagination. Few human activities reveal the relationship between nature and technology a


Antigua and Barbuda and the Economics of Island Survival
Antigua and Barbuda is often presented to the world through the language of paradise. Turquoise water, sailing yachts, coral reefs, luxury resorts and white beaches dominate the international image of the country. Tourism campaigns sell warmth, escape and relaxation. Cruise ships arrive carrying thousands of visitors. Social media presents the islands as places where time slows down and everyday pressure disappears. But beneath that image sits a far more complicated system. A


Road Rage and the Emotional System of the Road
Road rage is often described as bad behaviour. A driver shouts through a windscreen. Someone leans on the horn. A car tailgates aggressively. A hand gesture appears through a side window. In more extreme cases, a minor traffic incident escalates into confrontation, violence or tragedy. But road rage is not only a personal failure of temperament. It is also a systems problem. The road places strangers inside powerful machines, moving at speed, under time pressure, surrounded b


Nuts: The Tiny Foods Sitting Beneath Global Trade, Survival and Everyday Life
Nuts occupy a strange position in modern life. They are simultaneously survival foods, luxury products, airline snacks, festival ingredients, farming commodities, street foods, religious offerings and billion-dollar export industries. They appear casually in supermarket aisles, office snack jars and hotel breakfast buffets, yet behind their small size sits an enormous global system involving agriculture, labour, climate, nutrition, culture and international trade. Few foods m
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