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


The Commonwealth: A Global Network Shaped by History
The Commonwealth is one of the most unusual international systems in the modern world. It is not a country, not a military alliance, and not a tightly integrated economic bloc like the European Union. Yet it connects 56 countries and more than 2.5 billion people across Africa, Asia, Europe, the Caribbean, the Pacific, and the Americas. For many people, the Commonwealth appears only occasionally in public life through events like the Commonwealth Games, diplomatic summits, or


Work Commuting: The Daily Journey That Shapes Cities
Work commuting looks ordinary because it happens every day. People leave homes, catch trains, sit in cars, board buses, cycle through traffic, walk to stations, squeeze into underground carriages, wait at junctions, scan ticket barriers, and arrive at workplaces often before the workday has emotionally begun. But commuting is not just travel. It is one of the deepest systems connecting housing, employment, transport, class, health, family life, urban design, climate, and time


Why the Future of AI Depends on Cooling Water, Pipes and Fans
Artificial intelligence is often presented as something futuristic and weightless. Advertisements show glowing interfaces, floating graphics and sleek digital assistants capable of answering questions in seconds. Politicians talk about AI transforming economies. Technology firms describe a new industrial revolution powered by data and algorithms. But beneath all the futuristic language sits something far less glamorous: heat. Every AI prompt, image generation request, cloud b

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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USSD: The Mobile Code System Powering African Finance
For millions of people across Africa, Asia and other emerging economies, some of the most important digital systems in daily life do not rely on smartphone apps at all. They rely on USSD. Unstructured Supplementary Service Data, commonly shortened to USSD, is one of the most influential yet overlooked communication technologies in the mobile economy. While smartphone users in wealthier countries often associate digital life with apps, touchscreens and high-speed internet, USS


Data Entry and the Hidden Workforce Behind the Digital Economy
Data entry is often viewed as one of the most ordinary office jobs in the world. The phrase itself can sound repetitive, administrative or even low status compared with careers associated with management, technology or creative industries. Yet behind banks, hospitals, airlines, governments, supermarkets, logistics companies and global technology systems sits an enormous workforce responsible for entering, organising, correcting and maintaining information. Modern economies de


Walking Across Continents and the Systems Behind Long-Distance Human Endurance
Every year, people attempt journeys that seem almost irrational to outsiders. Someone walks from London toward Sudan. Another cycles from France to Cape Town. Others cross South America on foot, drive old motorcycles across Central Asia or spend months moving slowly through deserts, mountains and unstable border regions carrying little more than backpacks, cameras and endurance. These journeys are often described as adventures, but they also reveal something much deeper about


The Global Systems Behind Breakfast Cereal
Few food products reveal the intersection between agriculture, advertising, industrialisation, health culture and modern convenience as clearly as cereal. What appears each morning in brightly coloured supermarket boxes is actually the result of enormous global systems involving grain farming, food science, branding, logistics, nutrition policy, child psychology, television advertising and industrial food processing. Breakfast cereal helped reshape how millions of people acro


Presidents, Prime Ministers and the Systems of National Leadership
Every country has some form of leadership structure sitting at the centre of national decision-making. In some places it is a president. In others it is a prime minister, monarch, military council or collective ruling party. Yet regardless of the title, national leaders rarely operate as isolated decision-makers. They function inside enormous political, economic, legal, military and cultural systems that shape what leadership actually means in practice. The public often exper


From Napoleon to Walmart: The Rise of Canned Food Systems
Long before food influencers, meal-prep culture and supermarket abundance, societies faced a far simpler and harsher reality: food spoiled quickly. Distance mattered enormously. Seasons dictated survival. Failed harvests could destabilise entire regions. The development of the tin can — or canned food, as it is more commonly called in the United States — changed that equation permanently. What appears today as an ordinary supermarket object was once revolutionary technology.


The Brain: The Three-Pound System Shaping Human Civilisation
The human brain is one of the strangest and most powerful systems ever discovered because it is both the machine observing reality and part of the reality being observed. Every city built, war fought, religion formed, business launched, song written, relationship destroyed, law created and technology invented ultimately passed through human brains first. Modern civilisation itself is, in many ways, the externalisation of billions of brains interacting with each other across t


The Credit Card: Borrowed Money in Your Pocket
Few objects changed consumer behaviour more than the credit card. Small enough to fit inside a wallet, simple enough to use within seconds, yet powerful enough to reshape shopping, travel, banking, debt, advertising and modern consumer culture globally. Most people experience credit cards through ordinary moments: tapping for groceries, booking flights online, paying for fuel or splitting large purchases over time. But underneath that plastic card sits one of the most influen


What Strikes Reveal About Society
Strike action is often presented as disruption. Trains do not run, hospitals cancel appointments, schools close, rubbish piles up, ports slow down, factories stop producing and commuters become angry. From the outside, a strike can look like a refusal to work, a public inconvenience or a fight over pay. But the deeper reality is far more important. Strikes reveal which workers a society depends on, how power is distributed, how fragile everyday systems really are and what hap


Menstruation: The Monthly Reality Half the World Is Expected to Manage
Menstruation is one of the most universal human experiences on earth, yet for much of history it has been treated as something embarrassing, secretive or inconvenient. Billions of women and girls experience periods for decades of their lives, but the systems surrounding menstruation often reveal far deeper realities involving poverty, healthcare, education, infrastructure, work, gender expectations and cultural attitudes. What appears biologically ordinary at the surface quic


Documentaries and the Battle to Explain the World
Most people think documentaries simply record reality. Nature films, crime investigations, war footage, historical stories or celebrity profiles presented through interviews and archive material. But documentaries do far more than show the world. They shape how the world is understood. They influence public memory, political opinion, cultural fears, emotional reactions and even national identity. In many ways, documentaries have become one of the most powerful systems humans


Borrowed Futures: The System Built on Debt
Most people think of debt as something personal. Credit cards, loans, overdrafts, mortgages or missed repayments. It is often framed morally: responsible people manage debt well, irresponsible people fall into trouble. But underneath those personal stories sits a much deeper reality. Modern economies themselves are built on debt. Countries, corporations, banks, universities, property markets and even governments depend heavily on borrowing to function and expand. Debt is not
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