The Saudi royal family and Aramco leadership are, and almost always have been, motivated by ambitions of long-term strength and profit. They use Islamic law, traditional ideology, and harsh justice to maintain stability and their own power, but underneath the thobes and abayas and behind the religious fanaticism and illiberalism lies a sophisticated and ruthless business enterprise. Over more than a century, fed by ambition and oil wealth, al Saud (as the royal family is known) has come from having next to nothing to ruling as absolute monarchs. Their story starts with Saudi Arabia's founder, the lowly refugee Abdul Aziz, embarking on a daring gambit to reconquer his family's ancestral home: the mud-walled city of Riyadh. And it ends with al Saud's most ambitious move yet: taking Aramco, the multinational business that has made them the wealthiest family in the world, public.
Big Data
Brian Clegg
audiobookDisorder
Helen Thompson
audiobookRestarting the Future
Jonathan Haskel, Stian Westlake
audiobookÖkoethinvesting : Geld ökologisch-nachhaltig und ethisch-sozial anlegen und intelligent investieren: Profitiere vom Megatrend Nachhaltigkeit und faire Geldanlage - ganz ohne Verzicht auf Rendite!
Christopher Klein
audiobookNot One Inch
M.E. Sarotte
audiobookArt & Crime : The fight against looters, forgers, and fraudsters in the high-stakes art world
Stefan Koldehoff, Tobias Timm
audiobookFuture Peace
Robert H. Latiff
audiobookWhere the Money Is : Value Investing in the Digital Age
Adam Seessel
audiobookThe Strategy of Denial
Elbridge A. Colby
audiobookSamuelson Friedman
Nicholas Wapshott
audiobookAdaptation Under Fire
Davivd Barno, Nora Bensahel
audiobookValue : The Four Cornerstones of Corporate Finance
Tim McKinsey & Company Inc., Huyett Huyett, Bill Dobbs, Richard Koller
audiobook