Curated lists
High-value intersections where two or more industries collide and create professions, risks, and markets most reading lists still overlook.
10 published lists in this category.
A boundary-crossing reading path through machine learning for biology, protein design, genomics, drug discovery, automation, synthetic organisms, and the governance of accelerated biological invention.
A frontier library on microgravity materials, pharmaceuticals, orbital factories, launch economics, robotics, supply chains, station operations, and which products might genuinely be better made in space.
A systems reading path through correlated catastrophe, cyber loss, algorithmic underwriting, model risk, autonomous liability, climate retreat, systemic exposure, and the reinvention of risk pooling.
A cross-disciplinary legal curriculum on robots, autonomous vehicles, drones, agents, liability, personhood, evidence, safety standards, cross-border operation, and laws written for actors without intentions.
An ingenious reading path beyond human-centered design, exploring machine-readable environments, animal perception, ecological design, autonomous agents, accessibility, and products used by multiple forms of intelligence.
A practical and historical guide to supplying people and machines where distance, weather, isolation, failure, and scarce infrastructure make ordinary logistics impossible.
A future-facing accounting library on natural capital, emissions, data assets, software, algorithms, human capital, brand, risk, assurance, and what financial statements fail to show.
A cross-domain reading path through negotiation, deterrence, norms, treaties, strategic ambiguity, climate conflict, cyber operations, orbital competition, and diplomacy in domains without mature rules.
A design-focused reading path through passive cooling, vernacular architecture, shade, courtyards, water systems, desert cities, materials, landscape, and buildings that remain habitable with less energy and water.
A rare cross-disciplinary library on repair as a universal practice: healing, maintenance, restoration, reconciliation, debugging, regeneration, reform, and deciding what should be fixed rather than replaced.