Born in the Netherlands, Alex Matthews began his working life in the classroom-as a primary school teacher-before turning to economics and later teaching at high school level, preparing adolescents for university and other higher education. He eventually left education to become a director of several companies. At forty, a serious car accident changed everything. Told he would never return to work, he refused to accept a protocol that didn't match his ambitions. He enrolled in law and tax law, completing both within two and a half years. He practised as a lawyer and became a solicitor/barrister, tax lawyer, certified court mediator, chartered tax accountant, and arbitrator, moving within a highly engaged professional community in the legal world.Then his story turned. The comfortable assumptions behind institutions, such as how authority speaks, how harm hides, and how reputations are managed, became personal. This book begins at that hinge: where a life built on competence and trust meets the machinery that can undo both. Today, settled in Australia, Matthews is a well-known collector and photographer of minerals and runs a food business with his wife. Writing a book was never on his horizon. But horizons move-sometimes quietly, sometimes all at once-and this is the one he found himself compelled to cross.https: //www.robeledger.com
""They told us to trust the collar. We trusted and it broke people. This book collects the quiet tragedies hidden behind ceremony - raw, humane, urgent."" Dr. Elena Vogt, Munich ""The robes speak when no one's watching - and the truth is worse than you think. Read The Robe and the Ledger - ROBES, JABOTS and HUMAN FAILURE for eye-opening; impossible-to-ignore stories about power and silence."" Vivianne La Roche, Paris "" Behind composed robes are urgent scandals and urgent reforms - whistleblowers, investigations, consequences. This book reads like a legal thriller - except it's real."" Ignatio Valera, Barcelona ""Quiet choices, explosive consequences. These composite cases read like investigations - except they're painfully familiar."" Berhard Visser, Amsterdam