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This book directly helps decision-makers and change agents in
companies, NGOs, and government bodies become more proficient in
transformative, collaborative change in realizing the SDGs. This
practitioner's handbook translates a systemic - and enlivening -
approach to collaboration into day-to-day work and management. It
connects the emerging practice of multi-stakeholder collaboration
to easily understandable models, tools, and cases. Numerous,
concrete cases not only bring this methodology to life, but also
help identify the challenges and avoid common mistakes. The book
can be used as a guide to apply a breakthrough approach for
navigating the complexity of stakeholder systems, designing
results-oriented process architectures, ensuring the success of
cross-sector change initiatives, and enlivening collaboration
ecosystems for SDG implementation. It is designed to enhance high
quality stakeholder engagement, dialogue, and collaboration. A
must-read, the book sets a new standard for the collaborative
implementation of Agenda 2030 and is a foundational guide for
leading sustainability transformations collectively to achieve
climate change mitigation, social integration, equitable value
chains, and broad sustainability challenges.
This book directly helps decision-makers and change agents in
companies, NGOs, and government bodies become more proficient in
transformative, collaborative change in realizing the SDGs. This
practitioner's handbook translates a systemic - and enlivening -
approach to collaboration into day-to-day work and management. It
connects the emerging practice of multi-stakeholder collaboration
to easily understandable models, tools, and cases. Numerous,
concrete cases not only bring this methodology to life, but also
help identify the challenges and avoid common mistakes. The book
can be used as a guide to apply a breakthrough approach for
navigating the complexity of stakeholder systems, designing
results-oriented process architectures, ensuring the success of
cross-sector change initiatives, and enlivening collaboration
ecosystems for SDG implementation. It is designed to enhance high
quality stakeholder engagement, dialogue, and collaboration. A
must-read, the book sets a new standard for the collaborative
implementation of Agenda 2030 and is a foundational guide for
leading sustainability transformations collectively to achieve
climate change mitigation, social integration, equitable value
chains, and broad sustainability challenges.
Curiosity about nuns and their distinctive clothing is almost as
old as Catholicism itself. The habit intrigues the religious and
the nonreligious alike, from medieval maidens to contemporary
schoolboys, to feminists and other social critics. The first book
to explore the symbolism of this attire, "The Habit presents a
visual gallery of the diverse forms of religious clothing and
explains the principles and traditions that inspired them. More
than just an eye-opening study of the symbolic significance of
starched wimples, dark dresses, and flowing veils, "The Habit is an
incisive, engaging portrait of the roles nuns have and do play in
the Catholic Church and in ministering to the needs of society.
From the clothing seen in an eleventh-century monastery to the garb
worn by nuns on picket lines during the 1960s, habits have always
been designed to convey a specific image or ideal. The habits of
the Benedictines and the Dominicans, for example, were specifically
created to distinguish women who consecrated their lives to God;
other habits reflected the sisters' desire to blend in among the
people they served. The brown Carmelite habit was rarely seen
outside the monastery wall, while the "Flying Nun turned the white
winged cornette of the Daughters of Charity into a universally
recognized icon. And when many religious abandoned habits in the
1960s and '70s, it stirred a debate that continues today.
Drawing on archival research and personal interviews with nuns all
over the United States, Elizabeth Kuhns examines some of the gender
and identity issues behind the controversy and brings to light the
paradoxes the habit represents. For some, it epitomizes oppression
and obsolescence; for others, it embodies the ultimate beauty and
dignity of the vocation.
Complete with extraordinary photographs, including images of the
nineteenth century nuns' silk bonnets to the simple gray dresses of
the Sisters of Social Service, this evocative narrative explores
the timeless symbolism of the habit and traces its evolution as a
visual reflection of the changes in society.
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