Organizations Books
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Excellent educational lesson for all organizationsReview Date: 2004-04-27
Spiritual Victories and Worldly DefeatsReview Date: 2004-09-04
A driving, devastating indictment of the greedy "televangelists" who reached the peak of their financial powers in the 1980's and then saw it taken away from them in a series of humiliating scandals that made people question their faith...in TV preachers anyway.
I remember chatting with a book store clerk at that time and learning she was a born-again Christian. Shaking her head at the Bakker/Swaggart/Roberts scandals, she said, "The devil really won that round."
"How do you know it was the devil that brought them down?" I asked. "I have the impression that maybe God had had about enough of their shenaningans."
But that's about the extent of my stone-throwing. I end up feeling pity for these people. And feeling horrible for the millions who poured their millions into these lavish lifestyles. My great grandmother could have been referred to as one of Bakker's "Granny Grunts," the elderly ladies he always beseeched to fess up with the cash.
I could see through Bakker even as a kid and felt sorry that my great grandma couldn't. If anything, I think the PTL scandal made her realize where her real devotion should have been: on the savior mentioned in every PTL sales pitch, not the bawling, over-dressed con artists pleading for dollars for that big water slide in their amusement park.
Charles Shepard, the author and reporter for the Charlotte Observer, was the perfect person to write this book: he'd been covering Bakker for years and seeing scams and abuses up close for a long time.
Definitely worth your while to read.
Pultizer Prize Winning AccountReview Date: 2000-03-30

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Form a business or corporation in any state.Review Date: 2003-09-27
Highly recommended!
One of the best books on incorporating your businessReview Date: 2004-03-07
While there are many books on how to incorporate, this one is written by a man who has/is in business, thinks like a businessman but also understands and knows the legal jargon.
I highly recommend this book along with the Small Business Legal Kit also by J.W. Dicks and Inc. Yourself by Judith H. McQuown.
Must reading for anyone in businessReview Date: 2003-11-09

A very good handbook on careersReview Date: 2000-12-04
A pragmatic approach to succeeding in the new world of work.Review Date: 1997-04-10
A true "how-to" book for career buildingReview Date: 1997-05-19

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I often give this book as a gift.Review Date: 2008-09-11
Vulnerable, we become approachable. Community is possible.
Aware of our shadow, we become less judgmental. Community is possible.
The residents of Vanier's community have severe physical and mental handicaps which soon test the souls of "regular" community members who support them. Once anger, jealousy, rivalry and impatience is exposed, it can be acknowledged and dealt with. The "evil" is not so much in the community as it is in ME. Contact with the handicapped residents is healing, transformational. People become "real." Community results from the relationship established among authentic people.
"Elitism is the sickness of us all...Healing takes place at the bottom of the ladder, not at the top."
-Jack H. Bender, author of Disregarded: Transforming the School and Workplace through Deep Respect and Courage
Vanier's InsightReview Date: 2007-10-13
This book takes only couple of hours to read, but will take years of living to digest.
BRIEF YET DEEP LESSON IN COMPASSION, COMMUNITY, AND LOVING RECONCILIATION OUR POPE CALLS US TO IN SACRAMENTUM CARITATISReview Date: 2007-07-02
Father Henri Nouwen, renowned and prolific author of such spiritual classics as Compassion: A Reflection on the Christian Life, Spiritual Journals: The Genesee Diary, Gracias!, the Road to Daybreak and Clowning in Rome Reflections on Solitude, Celibacy, Prayer, and Contemplation, as well as so many others, gladly writes the inroduction to this book, putting clearly and concisely the spiritual and social significance of this work. Ronald F. Thieman, Professor at Harvard Divinity, then delivers an historical and theological presentation of the two lectures, which were given in Cambridge Massachusetts in November of 1988, the twenty fifth anniversary of the Kennedy killing.
Although now nearly twenty years have passed since the delivery of these lectures, we need them now more than ever, as our broken world breaks more and our hearts turn against our brothers and our sisters and our neighbors, as we forget the commandments of Our professed Lord Jesus Christ to Love our Enemies and to do good to those who harm us, to love one another as He has loved us.
This book, though brief draws us to fulfill the climactic and closing words of Our Holy Father's Apostolic Exhortation Sacramentum Caritatis mentioned above as, compelled by our participation in the Holy Eucharist, we are compelled in all humility to seek reconciliation and forgiveness with one another, and a more just and peaceful world.
The great Jean Vanier therefore illustrates this path from Brokenness to Community, which is the Kingdom of Heaven, in his usual direct and compassionate manner, full of examples from his worldwide communities of the broken, the disabled, the rejected and the hurt, finding made real one with the other God's Love for once and for all in their long, lonely lives. I wish an audiobook of these lectures were available, even though we have now lost forever in this world the great and prophetic voice of Jean Vanier, not only as mine own eyes grow dim, but for that Word to suffuse me and to inspire me and to carry me towards the humility of reconciliation and compassion, the seeking of forgiveness and of God's Love.
Please, you will not be disappointed by this brief book, now so affordable, a bargain at any price, for how may we measure the cost of GOd's Love? Come from our divided and individual brokenness into the joy and peace of God's Community with this book in hand, reading every step of the rugged way.
A good book to have.

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Enviromental justice and grassroots advocacyReview Date: 2001-05-26
Environmental JusticeReview Date: 2001-03-17
Understanding Environmental JusticeReview Date: 2001-03-16
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This book can change the quality of America's output.Review Date: 1999-01-21
Liked it!Review Date: 1998-08-15
The best book I've read on this subject!Review Date: 1998-08-15
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GREAT for elementary education!Review Date: 2000-05-15
A "must have" book for the classroom!Review Date: 1999-08-14
A useful resource guide for teachers.Review Date: 1999-01-04

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A great book!Review Date: 2004-08-19
For any young person who hopes to spend part of their professional life in nonprofits, this book is a great introduction to the field. You really get a sense of the kinds of issues that will be faced by organizations in the next 10 years.
Thought-provoking and InsightfulReview Date: 2004-08-03
Must read in nonprofit sectorReview Date: 2004-06-02

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Short ReviewReview Date: 2005-04-01
Great, insightful readReview Date: 2004-09-24
The popular story vs the actualReview Date: 2007-11-18
What I was taught by public school and the popular press:
The Catholic Church persecuted Galileo because he asserted the Earth revolved around the Sun, and was threatened with torture and death. Copernicus delayed publishing his theory for fear of persecution from the Church, finally publishing it on his deathbed in 1543.
What Langford convincingly shows from research into primary documents:
The Catholic Church was more receptive to the heliocentric theory than the universities. Pope Clement requested a hearing of Copernicus' theory in the Vatican gardens, and was "quite favorably impressed" with the theory. Copernicus was afraid of persecution from his peers, the universities, not the Catholic Church. His fears were well founded, as Galileo discovered years later. Galileo received the full weight of academic condemnation and ridicule for daring to buck the Ptolemic status quo. When professors realized peer pressure wouldn't silence Galileo, they turned to the Church for help. Fortunately, a good portion of the Church was behind Galileo. The head of one Jesuit college wrote to Galileo to say that his astronomers and mathematicians had confirmed his theory, but wanted more proof. Galileo's efforts were further encouraged by Pope Urban. His first trial resulted in being admonished not to teach it as fact, but was welcome to teach it as theory. Unfortunately, by the time of his second trial in 1633, he had managed to alienate his support, partly by insisting his theory be taught as fact. One of his proofs was tides--he believed they were cause by the Earth sloshing the oceans. He also insisted on circular orbits, and refused to consider Kepler's calculations on elliptical orbits, which would have corrected errors he and others found in his model. He was tried a second time for teaching the theory as fact, not for teaching the theory. He was never tortured or shown a dungeon. His house arrest consisted of a five-room apartment with a servant at his disposal, and was free to roam Rome while awaiting trial. After the trial, he was released. True he was threatened with imprisonment, but at his age, Langford asserts, both he and the court officials knew it would not be carried out; the sentence would have been mitigated.
In short, Galileo and Copernicus were treated by the academia in much the same way they treat new ideas today. For an explanation of why the geo-centric theory isn't Biblical in principle or origin, read Sampson's Six Modern Myths.


A Must RealReview Date: 2008-09-07
BRINKERHOFF DOES IT AGAINReview Date: 2008-09-01
J.B. Priestly once wrote, "There was no respect for youth when I was young, and now that I am old, there is no respect for age - I missed it coming and going." As an aging baby boomer, I have often felt like Priestly, especially when leading my nonprofit organization and dealing with everyday generational issues like the one I cited above.
However, Peter C. Brinkerhoff's book, "Generations: The Challenge of a Lifetime for Your Nonprofit", offers some practical ways of looking at the dilemma of generational diversity. Like most of Brinkerhoff's books, this one is a practical guide. He has discussion questions, practical examples and exercises for thinking about this grossly engaging and extremely complex subject. He examines generational differences in the way that staff members interact. In one of the best sections on Board and Volunteers, he talks about the way generational diversity changes the way boards make decisions and the way volunteers are recruited. In the final sections, Brinkerhoff talks about changes that will occur to the people that your nonprofit serves and how you can market your services to them.
Brinkerhoff outlines "Six Big Actions" that are at the core of generational planning. He shows how each of these Actions can be used to look at generational issues with staff, boards and constituents. This is a wonderful framework to examine and to structure change within any nonprofit (or for profit) organization.
Finally, Brinkerhoff builds on the great work of the Annie E. Casey Foundation and talks about what has been referred to as "The Nonprofit Leadership Crisis" - the great turnover in nonprofit executives that will occur in the next ten years. As the Casey Foundation has reminded us, the "Next Shift" in nonprofit leadership will change not only the faces in nonprofit leadership, but also in many ways will change the perceptions of leaders. Leaders with different generational issues and values will occupy seats previously held by the Baby Boom Generation. How these generational shifts change the nature and complexity of our nonprofit organizations will be fascinating to watch. Beyond that, Brinkerhoff gives us some practical ways of evaluating that change yet keeping our nonprofit organizations focused on our true missions.
Best seller, available from the publisherReview Date: 2007-11-27
Related Subjects: Standard Gauge Narrow Gauge
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The clear moral of the story is that if an organization's head is doing things that seem odd, don't just go ahead and do them anyway!
The book is out of print, but well worth getting if you can find it.