In 2000, Mosley's first work of non-fiction,
Dumbing Down, a collection of essays and interviews on the concept of
dumbing down, was published on Imprint Academic. Contributors to the publication include
Michael Oakshott,
Ravi Shankar,
Phillip Rieff,
Robert Brustein,
Roger Deakin,
Adam Boulton,
Peter Randall-Page,
Claire Fox,
John Ziman and
Jaron Lanier. Mosley followed this in 2003 with
Democracy, Fascism and the New World Order, and a second book about democracy,
In The Name of the People published by Imprint Academic in 2013. In this book Mosley clarifies the distinction between representative government and rule by the people, along with the former's dangers, citing works such as
The History of the Origins of Representative Government (1821/22) by
François Guizot, later prime minister of France. The long chapter
How Debt Came to Rule the World charges elected representative governments with betraying the people by allowing banks to create the money supply, recommends
Bank Credit by C. A. Phillips (1920) as the clearest extant explanation of the current international banking system, and quotes heavily from
Henry Calvert Simons'
Economic Policy for a Free Society (University of Chicago Press, 1951). One of Mosley's last books,
Bank Robbery, has been serialised on two monetary reform websites,
The Cobden Centre, and
Positive Money. Ivo Mosley was a vocal critic of the fascist politics of his grandfather Oswald Mosley, often commenting publicly on the "evil legacy" of fascism. As a journalist he has written widely and internationally on topics including democracy, religion, multiculturalism, science, and economics. Mosley also wrote articles for national newspapers, including the Telegraph, the Catholic Herald, Resurgence, and the
Times Higher Education Supplement, mostly reviewing works of non-fiction. ==Opera and theatre==