Nathanial Gronewold is a veteran journalist with experience running
assignments in Pakistan, Colombia, Kenya, Haiti, and beyond. He is
the winner of the 2019 National Press Club Award for newsletter
writing.
Gronewold formerly reported on the United Nations and global
affairs for Nikkei, The Economist, and The Canadian Press. He
currently writes on environmental and energy news, establishing
bureaus for E&E News in New York, Houston, and Japan. To date
he has written over 2,700 reports, including articles appearing in
The New York Times, Scientific American, and Science Magazine. He
is a two-time recipient of the Gold prize for coverage of climate
change by the United Nations Correspondents Association and was
awarded the 2012 Honorable Mention by the National Press Club.
Both a professional journalist and academic, Nathanial is pursuing
his PhD in environmental science at Hokkaido University in Japan.
He currently resides in northern Japan with his wife.
"In Anthill Economics, Gronewold provides a great service by
explaining crucial linkages between science and economics that have
been neglected for far too long in economic and policy circles. As
he eloquently explains, important social and economic concepts such
as growth and income inequality are indeed linked to how we
interact with the physical world, including the extraction of
energy and natural resources. We must embrace these findings from
researchers crossing academic and philosophical divides so we can
make more accurately-informed policy decisions." -Dr. Carey W.
King, Assistant Director and Research Scientist at the Energy
Institute at the University of Texas at Austin
"As a well-trained outside observer, not a scientist or economist,
he is clear-eyed and not protective of the disciplines he examines,
though he expresses feeling indebted to wisdom from across
disciplines, citing scientists and researchers throughout.Anthill
Economics suggests a new means of viewing large economic
trends."-Foreword Reviews
"Nathanial Gronewold presents out-of-the-box theories of economic
relativity that would intrigue Albert Einstein. Anyone who loves to
think will enjoy Anthill Economics and its creative and
thought-provoking analysis of how real-life financial issues are
impacted by physics and the laws of nature. If you've been
disappointed by economists - and most of us have - you will
appreciate the alternative clues presented in this entertaining
book about our economic futures."-Thomas P. Vartanian, Executive
Director, Financial Regulation & Technology Program and Professor
of Law at George Mason University's Antonin Scalia Law School, and
the author of 200 Years of American Financial Panics: Crashes,
Recessions, Depressions, and the Technology that Will Change it All
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