
Fake Law: The Truth About Justice in an Age of Lies by The Secret Barrister is a brilliant example of good popular legal literature.

New Economic School (NES) held the series of lectures "Economics and Life." The main theme was insightful: in your everyday life, do not forget to put on economic glasses.

The St. Petersburg International Legal Forum 9 ¾: Vaccination by Law brought together predominantly lawyers, although its agenda was devoted to issues with a much wider circle of stakeholders.

What Money Can’t Buy: The Moral Limits of Markets by Michael Sandel asks, as the title goes, what money can’t buy. More intriguingly, it wonders what money can but shouldn’t buy.

Reading Cambridge Handbook of the Law of Algorithms (edited by Woodrow Barfield, 2021) appeared to me like flying on a long-range aircraft: I departed from good old days of law, enjoyed a 360-degree coverage of social and legal challenges caused by algorithms, and arrived to a brave new world.

My 2021 started with a thrilling, terrifying, and terrific The Road to Ruin: The Global Elites’ Secret Plan for the Next Financial Crisis by James Rickards.

Legal Data for Banking by Akber Detoo perfectly illustrates how the boosting of regulations in the aftermath the 2007–2008 Financial Crisis highlighted deficiencies in the legal data management.

The 11th Moscow Exchange Forum 2021 was a worthy exercise on the topic of what is going on with the Russian capital market today.