This is a book about fear. Fear of a virus. Fear of death. Fear of losing our jobs, our democracy, our human connections, our health and our minds. It’s also about how the government weaponised our fear against us – supposedly in our best interests – until we were the most frightened country in Europe.
But why did the government deliberately frighten us, and how has this affected us as individuals and as a country? Who is involved in the decision-making that affects our lives? How are behavioural science and nudge theory being used to subliminally manipulate us? How does the media leverage fear? What are the real risks to our wellbeing?
Ahead of any official inquiry into the handling of the Covid-19 pandemic, Laura Dodsworth explores all these questions and more, in a nuanced and thought-provoking discussion of an extraordinary year in British life and politics. With stories from members of the general public who were impacted by fear, anxiety and isolation, and revealing interviews with psychologists, politicians, scientists, lawyers, Whitehall advisers and journalists, A State of Fear calls for a more hopeful, transparent and effective democracy.

Moneyland
Maths On the Back of An Envelope
Hitler and Stalin
On the Road
The Story of the World in 100 Moments
Stories We Tell Ourselves
This Is Not Propaganda
Speeches That Changed the World
No Room For Small Dreams
The Mother of All Questions : Further Feminisms
Good Economics For Hard Times
Doughnut Economics : Seven Ways to Think Like a 21st-Century Economist
Broken Heartlands
Who Lost Russia? : From the Collapse of the USSR to Putin's War on Ukraine


