Hello, I’m Adam. I’ve been writing here for many years – blogs, essays, and the occasional book – all shaped by the things I’ve seen, the people I’ve worked with, and the systems I’ve lived inside.
My background isn’t straightforward. I grew up with very little, left school at sixteen, worked on farms and in practical jobs, and found my way back into education at twenty. Since then I’ve spent time in local government, charities, business, and community work – often in roles where the decisions were real and the consequences mattered. All of that experience shapes how I think and what I write about.
These days I’m focused on how we make sense of the world as it is, and how we might build something better from where we stand. I’m interested in the gap between how systems are supposed to work and how they actually behave, and in the choices people make when they’re navigating that space.
If you’re here to explore ideas, understand patterns, or make sense of the world around you, you’re in the right place.

Adam lives in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire.
He spends his time writing, researching, volunteering, following Gloucester Rugby, and walking his dogs Betty and Bea through the landscapes he’s lucky to call home – near Cheltenham, Gloucester and the Cotswold Hills.
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The Human Sovereignty Charter for Artificial Intelligence – A Constitutional Framework for Human-Centred Governance of AI | Full Text
The Human Sovereignty Charter for Artificial Intelligence is a non statutory, ethical framework asserting that human dignity, agency, and judgement must never be subordinated to machines. Created in response to the rapid expansion of…
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Foods We Can Farm, Catch, Harvest and Grow Locally in and around the UK
It’s no great wonder that Foods We Can Trust are thought by many to be boring and bland, as well as being expensive and increasingly difficult to buy or access. The alternatives often taste…
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Is Poverty invisible to those who don’t experience it? | Full Text
Introduction In the Autumn of 2023, I embarked on a new adventure into higher education, driven by my building concern around Food Security issues and the certain reality that the UK is running the…
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Pensioners, Social Care and the Questions of inevitability, independence & incentives lost
Getting older is one of the few things left that we cannot actually control in our technical age. But how much thought do you give your ability to retain that independence which many of…
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Businesses are not inherently academic, so why are degrees becoming the prerequisite skill?
Latest news suggests that without more degree level education based skills, the UK will experience an exodus of jobs overseas to emerging economies. But when we already have students doing degrees just for the…
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Equality in Education has been destroyed by the idea that all can make the best of the same opportunities
Equality in education has been distorted by the belief that everyone can succeed through the same academic route. This piece argues that decades of policy driven “one size fits all” thinking have undermined real…







