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


The Piano Became One of the Most Powerful Cultural Machines Ever Built
The piano is not just a musical instrument. It is a machine that shaped homes, education, class identity, film music, religion, jazz, conservatories, childhood discipline, concert culture and emotional expression across centuries. Few objects moved so successfully between aristocratic salons, working-class living rooms, churches, concert halls, bars, schools and global popular culture. The piano became both furniture and status symbol, both artistic tool and educational syste


Nuclear Power Sits Between Fear, Energy and Survival
Few technologies divide opinion as sharply as nuclear power. To some people, it represents one of humanity’s greatest engineering achievements: a low-carbon energy source capable of powering entire nations with enormous efficiency. To others, it represents catastrophe waiting to happen: radiation, accidents, waste, secrecy and existential risk. Nuclear power exists in a strange space where science, politics, climate change, war, energy security and public fear all collide at


Curry Is Not One Dish. It Is a Global System of Spice, Empire and Migration
Curry is one of the most globally recognised food ideas in the world, yet it is also one of the most misunderstood. People speak of curry as if it is a single dish, but the word covers an enormous range of foods shaped by geography, empire, migration, religion, agriculture, trade, class, climate and taste. A curry in Chennai, Bangkok, Bradford, Durban, Tokyo, Kingston or Kuala Lumpur may share certain ideas of sauce, spice and depth, but each belongs to a different system of

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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Sun Loungers and the Business of Claiming a Patch of Paradise
Sun loungers look like one of the simplest objects in tourism. A reclining chair beside a pool, a folded bed on a beach, a towel spread across plastic or wood, sunglasses placed on top to mark temporary ownership. But sun loungers reveal far more than comfort. They expose how tourism turns space, status, timing, money, behaviour and human territorial instincts into a daily ritual. Around pools and beaches from Spain to Greece, Turkey, Egypt, Dubai, the Caribbean and the Canar


Rope: The Tool That Turns Pulling Into Control
Rope looks simple because it is old. Fibre twisted into length, strong enough to pull, tie, lift, drag, secure, rescue, climb, or restrain. Its power is not in complexity. Its power is in converting force into control across distance. The first function is connection. A rope allows one thing to act on another without direct contact. A boat tied to a harbour in Mombasa, a load lifted on a construction site in Dubai, or a tent secured in the Scottish Highlands all depend on the


Clothing Sizes: Measurement, Perception, and the System Behind Fit
Clothing sizes look like simple labels—S, M, L, or numbers on a tag—but they are part of a system shaped by manufacturing, body diversity, branding, and psychology. A size is not just a measurement; it is a compromise between standardisation and variation. At the foundation is measurement. Garments are produced using sizing charts based on average body dimensions. These averages come from population data, but no population is uniform. A size “M” in one brand reflects a set of


Umbrellas: Weather, Convenience, and the Systems Behind a Simple Object
An umbrella looks simple. A collapsible frame, a fabric canopy, a handle. But it sits inside a system that connects weather, manufacturing, urban behaviour, and retail timing. At the most basic level, umbrellas exist because of weather. Rainfall creates immediate demand. A sudden downpour in London or Singapore triggers instant purchasing decisions. Unlike planned purchases, umbrellas are often bought in response to need, not intention. That urgency shapes how and where they


Menopause and the Systems Surrounding Women, Ageing and Modern Work
Menopause is one of the most universal biological transitions in human life, yet for decades it existed strangely hidden inside modern society. Millions of women experience it globally, but public discussion around it was historically limited, awkward or treated as private discomfort rather than a major health, workplace and social issue. In recent years that has started to change. Menopause increasingly sits at the intersection of healthcare, ageing populations, workplace cu


Vaccines: From Local Injections to Global Immunity Systems, Protection Is Coordinated
Vaccines are medical products, but they are also systems that turn biology, logistics, trust, and policy into population-level protection. An injection in a clinic in London, a rural outreach campaign in Kenya, a school programme in India, a pharmacy appointment in United States, a national rollout in Brazil, or a cold-chain delivery to remote communities in Australia all connect to the same structure: individual doses that only work fully when systems align at scale. The inj


Treadmills: Running Hard While Staying in the Same Place
Treadmills are not exercise machines. They are controlled environments where effort is separated from movement. A runner in a gym in London, an apartment in New York, a fitness studio in Dubai, or a hotel in Nairobi can run for miles without changing location. The body works. The surroundings do not. What appears to be movement is actually contained exertion. The treadmill does not take you anywhere. It measures how hard you tried to go somewhere. The original purpose of the


Saunas: Where Heat Becomes Recovery, Ritual, and Status
A sauna is not just a hot room. It is controlled stress. The body is pushed into heat, the heart rate rises, sweat appears, and the person inside chooses to stay. That choice is the point. The value comes from enduring discomfort safely, then stepping out changed. In Finland, the sauna is not a luxury add-on. It is part of daily culture, family life, and national identity. Homes, apartment blocks, gyms, lakeside cabins, and public facilities all carry the same logic: heat, st


How Gas, Geography and History Shaped Algeria
Algeria is one of the largest and most strategically important countries in Africa, yet it often receives surprisingly limited global attention compared to countries with smaller populations or economies. Sitting on the Mediterranean directly opposite Europe, Algeria exists at the intersection of energy politics, anti-colonial history, migration systems, military power, Islamic identity, desert geography and post-colonial statehood. It is a country shaped deeply by both resis


Aluminium: The Metal Inside Airports, Beer Cans and Aircraft
Aluminium rarely attracts the attention given to oil, gold or artificial intelligence, yet modern civilisation would look completely different without it. Aircraft, power lines, skyscrapers, food packaging, smartphones, trains, cars, solar panels, military systems, construction materials and global logistics networks all depend heavily on aluminium. It is one of the foundational materials of modern industrial life, sitting invisibly inside systems people interact with every d


Haiti Helped Build the Modern World. So Why Was It Left Behind?
Haiti is often presented to the world through disaster footage, political instability, gang violence, earthquakes, hurricanes and humanitarian crises, yet that framing alone hides how deeply connected the country is to global history, trade, finance, migration, labour systems and the construction of the modern world itself. Haiti is not simply a struggling Caribbean nation existing on the margins of the global economy. In many ways, Haiti sits near the centre of some of the m


From LNG to the World Cup: How Qatar Built Global Relevance
Qatar is one of the clearest examples of how a tiny country can become globally influential by positioning itself strategically inside larger systems of energy, aviation, finance, diplomacy and media. On the surface, Qatar appears improbable: a small desert peninsula in the Gulf with a relatively tiny population, extreme summer heat and limited agricultural land. Yet within a few decades, it transformed itself into one of the wealthiest and most globally recognised states on
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