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Winnie Byanyima, former executive director of Oxfam International
"Inequality would not be a major issue around the world without the work of Ben Phillips. He has helped mobilize people power to transform the imbalances that destabilize our economies and scar our communities. This practical book empowers readers with the data, information, arguments and advice they need to be able to help bring an end to this crisis."
Ann Pettifor, author of The Case for the Green New Deal
"Ben Phillips is a stalwart campaigner for a fairer world. How to Fight Inequality is a handy primer to help people to build power together."
John Githongo
"Ben Phillips has helped bring global attention to the inequality crisis. How to Fight Inequality is an ideal guide for anyone who wants to help. He brings to the book lessons and stories from a lifetime deeply enmeshed in activism and organising, finding hope not in famous leaders but in everyday people, and helping set out how each of us can get engaged in building a more equal society."
Naila Kabeer
"We now know just how harmful inequality is to us all. But can anything be done about it? Ben Phillips's smart new book is packed with powerful stories of change won from the ground up, helps guide us in what we can do by organising together, and demonstrates that a more equal future is ours to make."
Kate Pickett
"Inequality defines our present but it is not our fate. In Ben Phillips's crisp guide he shows from past victories and today's vibrant new movements a way we can win. His first-hand stories from 'extraordinary, ordinary people' winning change illustrate how together we have the power to beat inequality."
Kumi Naidoo
"Most of us know how severe - and how dangerous - inequality has become. The debates have been won, but the problem keeps getting worse. Now we must win the fight. And there can be no spectators: it is up to you and me to make change happen. As US President Lyndon Johnson once told Martin Luther King: 'I know what I have to do - but you have to make me do it.' Ben Phillips' short, sharp, powerful book provides a rousing call for action, and draws on the hard lessons of history to create an essential how-to guide to what works and what doesn't, in the epoch-defying struggle of our new gilded age."
Nicholas Shaxson