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The Future of the Professions: How Technology Will Transform the Work of Human Experts Hardcover – 22 Oct 2015

4.3 out of 5 stars 20 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 368 pages
  • Publisher: OUP Oxford (22 Oct. 2015)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0198713398
  • ISBN-13: 978-0198713395
  • Product Dimensions: 23.9 x 2.8 x 16.3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 5,281 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

Product Description

Review

Books of the Year 2015: Best Books 2015 (Lorien Kite, Financial Times)

Books of the Year 2015 (New Scientist)

Perhaps the forthcoming tidal wave of technology set to engulf us all will throw up new opportunities for the legal profession ― which is probably why just about every lawyer in London, so we are told, has bought a copy of this challenging, provocative, timely and important book. If you care about the future of your profession and wish to add further comment to the raging controversies surrounding it, better get yourself a copy now. (Phillip Taylor MBE and Elizabeth Taylor of Richard Green Chambers)

In The Future of the Professions, father-and-son authors Richard and Daniel Susskind do a remorselessly effective job of demolishing the self-deception most people engage in when comparing themselves to machines. (Richard Waters, Financial Times)

The authors are undoubtedly right that the professions will change more in the next quarter-century than they have in the previous three. (The Economist)

remarkable work (Tom Watson, The Guardian)

This is a bold book ... The Future of the Professions helps us to recognise the professions' current methods as convoluted, self-serving rituals designed to wrap simple tasks in mystique. (Giles Wilkes, Prospect)

The Future of the Professions is a paradox that only a human mind could appreciate: the inevitable death of the professions is presented in an expert, original and witty work by two professionals whose skills (in thinking, writing and consultancy) are unlikely any time soon to be replicated by a machine. (David Pannick, The Times)

[A]n act of delicious iconoclasm. (Prospect Magazine)

both a good read and a good starter for strategic planning in professional firms (Chris Yapp, Future Tech Blog)

I suggest that everyone who considers themselves 'professional' reads this book, especially those who are aged, say, 20-45, who need to secure their role in the new world of work. The authors predict that "our professions will be dismantled incrementally". If they are right, todays lawyers need to prepare for it, and the sooner the better. (Dan Bindman, Legal Futures)

a fascinating and challenging book (Medium)

The study is exceptionally well informed and important contribution to thinking about the future of professional work (Network Review)

As the saying is, the future is now and we ignore it at our peril. Please read this book. (Law Skills)

the book is written in a relaxed, flowing and easily-consumable style ... a read of the Future of the Professions is time very well-spent. (Jeremy Hopkins, Future of Law)

Everyone interested in the future well-being of society must read this thoroughly researched and compelling book - to understand how technology can and will be used to enable the public to do far more for themselves. In reshaping our system of justice so that it can more cost-effectively underpin our democratic society and its prosperity, I have had the benefit of the Susskinds core thesis how to use technology not simply to enable the legal professions to do better what they now do, but to reshape justice for the benefit of the public. (Lord Thomas of Cwmgiedd, the Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales)

If the Susskinds are right we are at the start of a social revolution. Technology has begun to transform social class, economic activity, political discourse, working life and the limits of human activity. In The Future of the Professions they relentlessly and unyieldingly but also entertainingly and elegantly set about proving their point. I started knowing that their argument was important, I finished convinced that it was right. This is a necessary book. It was necessary that it be written and necessary that you read it. (Daniel Finkelstein, The Times)

impressive new book (Edward Fennell, The Times)

I know of no better book for anyone interested in the future of skilled jobs and society. Drawing on an astounding range of sources and the latest research, The Future of the Professions offers vital insights into the unprecedented disruption facing all the professions. (Professor Ian Goldin, Professor of Globalisation and Development and Director of the Oxford Martin School, University of Oxford.)

In this magisterial survey Richard and Daniel Susskind demolish each profession's faith in its immutable uniqueness. Instead they trace inexorable and universal forces that will drive disintermediation, deconstruction and disruption. Written with scholarly thoroughness, this is an urgent manifesto and practical blueprint for the leaders of every professional firm. (Philip Evans, Senior Partner & BCG Fellow, The Boston Consulting Group)

About the Author

PROFESSOR RICHARD SUSSKIND OBE is an author, speaker, and independent adviser to international professional firms and national governments. He is President of the Society for Computers and Law, IT Adviser to the Lord Chief Justice of England, and Chair of the Advisory Board of the Oxford Internet Institute. His numerous books include the best-sellers, The End of Lawyers? (OUP, 2008) and Tomorrow's Lawyers (OUP, 2013), his work has been translated into more than 10 languages, and he has been invited to speak in over 40 countries.

DANIEL SUSSKIND is a Lecturer in Economics at Balliol College, Oxford, where he teaches and researches, and from where he has two degrees in economics. Previously, he worked for the British Government - in the Prime Minister's Strategy Unit, in the Policy Unit in 10 Downing Street, and as a Senior Policy Adviser at the Cabinet Office. He was a Kennedy Scholar at Harvard University.


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4.3 out of 5 stars
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
The authors have effectively avoided being trapped writing a book about technology and focused instead on knowledge and how professionally-controlled knowledge will be influenced by wider changes driven by technology. I have a particular interest in the health professions, and my comments will reflect that perspective.
Separate research shows that few health professions are amendable to computerisation. What Susskind & Susskind have done is show that despite this, professional knowledge will be affected by computerisation and the forces that are at work. We do know again from other work, that digitisation is 'hollowing out' the workplace, which in healthcare means that middle professional roles (e.g. anyone who is a clinical / therapy assistant) is at risk, and that substantial growth is with low skill jobs (e.g. carers). Presumably the middle ground gets filled with robots, decision support systems, and lesser skilled people following what Susskinds' call systematisation, or systems that are digitally enabled and can be followed by non-specialists. This is hugely important as we have tended to resist the high tech/low touch corner of the matrix, believing healthcare will always be at least high touch.
One takes away a few things from the book. The first is whether the professional regulatory system is up to the task and second whether the professions will resist and enforce cartel controls. These two are linked as regulators have tended to be captured by the professions they regulate and therefore tend not to notice that the cat is out of the bag, as it likely in this case. The third is that few in healthcare really understand how digital is working through consumerisation of devices and knowledge (e.g. self-diagnostic kits).
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Format: Hardcover
AS NEW TECHNOLOGY CREATES THE POST-PROFESSIONAL SOCIETY, WILL IT REALLY BE THE END OF LAWYERS?

An appreciation by Phillip Taylor MBE and Elizabeth Taylor of Richmond Green Chambers

Read this and weep. In this controversial new title from Oxford University Press, Daniel Susskind (‘The End of Lawyers’) and David Susskind are predicting, for the most part, the end of your profession and sooner than later, especially if you happen to be a lawyer.

But you are not alone. The law is only one of the professions currently in the throes of more or less terminal decline, say the authors, due to the inexorable advance of technological innovation and change. The other professions (described as ‘elite’) are -- and here’s the list -- health, education, divinity, journalism, management consulting, tax and audit… and architecture. You’ll find specific comments on each in the book’s second chapter.

If all this is starting to sound a little scary, as well as improbable, perhaps it shouldn’t. The authors do not exactly state unequivocally that the forward march of technology will render lawyers and other professionals as extinct as diplodocus and other dinosaur species. What they do say, basically, is that ‘increasingly capable machines will transform the work of professionals, giving rise to new ways of sharing practical expertise in society.’ This is their central thesis.

Denying that they are ‘hardline determinists’, they speak further of a ‘post-professional society’ in which practical expertise will be available online to which people should have as much access as possible. ‘It is desirable,’ they say ‘to liberate practical expertise in this way.
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Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
The World is changing at an exponential rate: the power of technology doubles every 18 months and every new invention is a candidate for synthesis with existing inventions in a combinatorial explosion. The technological juggernaut gets heavier and faster; this book is helping me see it and hopefully avoid being crushed.
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Read the section on the profession I know. A re-hash of press cuttings, no real insight and certainly not an insight into this profession. Distrustful therefore of the 'predictions' about those professions with which I am not familiar, as the language is simple and easy to read and seductively persuasive that these trite repetitions of generalisations are relevant insights. Nothing could be further from the truth in architecture.
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A very interesting book, but the academic style irritated me; does it really need a lengthy discourse on what the word profession means? The very extensive list of references would facilitate a deeper study of the subject, but I would have preferred a shorter book that simply got on with speculating about the future.
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Format: Hardcover
This is a very important book for the medical profession. healthcare IT is the subject of endless criticism but i fact the technology itself is not the problem. in all 'IT projects ' the are three factors - technical, managerial and cultural, and the technical is never the blocker. there is also concern about the patient's ability to cope, but the real focus is the professionals' ability to cope, not with the technology but with the cultural and managerial implications on their role and status. this is a scholarly and readable book which should be read by everyone who has a part to play in creating the clinicians of tomorrow

Muir Gray
professor of Knowledge Management
Nuffield Department of Surgical Sciences
Oxford
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