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This book offers models, ideas and processes for personal
transformation, educational transformation and organizational
transformation in times of global crises. We live in a time of
Metacrisis, an era in which several major crises occur at the same
time. Times like these historically have offered opportunities for
breakthrough and transformation. Our old leadership and educational
models no longer work in this unpredictable and complex
environment. What does work in times of turmoil is the ability to
envision and enact new models, new systems and new forms of
leadership. The contributions in this book provide leaders and
change agents with a broad perspective on how transformation can
take place across different domains as well as practical steps that
can be implemented in various situations. It offers examples from
different cultures, regions, and religions to help leaders quickly
adapt and embrace whatever challenges that emerge. Taken together,
the enclosed chapters provide a roadmap for a more positive future
for all.
While the field of management has developed as a research
discipline over the last century, until the early 1990s there was
essentially no acknowledgement that the human spirit plays an
important role in the workplace. Over the past twenty years, the
tide has begun to turn, as evidenced by the growing number of
courses in academia and in corporate training, and an exponential
increase in the publications emerging through creative interaction
of scholars and practitioners in organizational behaviour,
workplace diversity, sustainability, innovation, corporate
governance, leadership, and corporate wellness, as well as
contributions by psychotherapists, theologians, anthropologists,
educators, philosophers, and artists. This Handbook is the most
comprehensive collection to date of essays by the preeminent
researchers and practitioners in faith and spirituality in the
workplace, featuring not only the most current research and case
examples, but visions of what will be, or should be, emerging over
the horizon. It includes essays by the people who helped to pioneer
the field as well as essays by up and coming young scholars. Among
the questions and issues addressed: * What does it mean to be a
"spiritual" organization? How does this perspective challenge
traditional approaches to the firm as a purely rational,
profit-maximizing enterprise? * Is faith and spirituality in the
workplace a passing fad, or is there a substantial shift occurring
in the business paradigm? * How does this field inform emerging
management disciplines such as sustainability, diversity, and
social responsibility? * In what ways are faith and spirituality in
the workplace similar to progressive and innovative human resource
practices. Does faith and spirituality in the workplace bring
something additional to the conversation, and if so, what? The aim
of The Handbook of Faith and Spirituality in the Workplace is to
provide researchers, faculty, students, and practitioners with a
broad overview of the field from a research perspective, while
keeping an eye on building a bridge between scholarship and
practice.
In ancient cultures, each village had a shaman or medicine man who
would visit the invisible world to obtain vital information,
guidance, and healing for members of the tribe. These edgewalkers
have contemporary counterparts in today's organizations—those
individuals who don't fit squarely into any one box; in their
metaphorical travels they interpret trends from the marketplace,
translate messages across departments, and envision the future
impact of today's decisions and actions. Edgewalking doesn't come
without its own risks and challenges; these unconventional people
often clash with more traditional, rule-bound colleagues, and they
are often frustrated by organizational systems that emphasize
quantitative results over creative impulses. And yet in today's
fast-changing, diverse, and globalized business environment,
organizations must recruit and support these people in order to
stay competitive. Featuring colorful interviews and practical tools
to gauge and manage your own edgewalking skills, Edgewalkers
explores the opportunities that are created by defying formal
boundaries and fostering creativity at every level of the
organization. They're the first people to volunteer to head up a
new business unit, lead a cross-company initiative, or take on an
overseas assignment. They're the glass half-full folks, who are
constantly thinking out of the box, forging alliances with
colleagues in other departments, seeking out new solutions to old
problems, and anticipating challenges on the horizon. And in
today's increasingly diverse workplaces, they are often people who
have pursued unusual educational and career paths, traveled widely,
and speak more than one language. Judi Neal has a term for these
people: Edgewalkers. Literally, an edgewalker is someone who walks
between two worlds. In ancient cultures, each village had a shaman
or medicine man who would visit the invisible world to obtain vital
information, guidance, and healing for members of the tribe.
Today's corporate edgewalkers serve a similar function,
interpreting trends from the marketplace, translating messages
across departments, and envisioning the future impact of today's
decisions and actions. Edgewalking doesn't come without its own
risks and challenges; these unconventional people often clash with
more traditional, rule-bound colleagues, and they are often
frustrated by organizational systems that emphasize quantitative
results over creative impulses. And yet in today's fast-changing,
globalized business environment, organizations must recruit and
support these people in order to stay competitive. Featuring
colorful interviews with edgewalkers from a variety of fields and
practical tools to gauge and manage your own edgewalking skills,
Edgewalkers explores the opportunities that are created by defying
formal boundaries and fostering creativity at every level of the
organization.
The book goes beyond theory to offer tools and suggestions for
developing emerging leaders. Inspired by the pioneering work of
leadership scholar Andre Delbecq, this book points towards an
expanded model of leadership that incorporates an active inner
life, and posits that such fully human models of leadership will be
essential to meet the profound challenges of the 21st Century.
Without presuming to provide definitive answers, the text explores
central questions such as: What is the added value of spiritual
maturity to leadership? Would the integration of mature
spirituality with well-developed intellectual and emotional
capacities produce more beneficial leadership outcomes for
organizations and individuals? What would a spiritually and
developmentally mature emerging leader look like in 10 to 20 years?
How do we prepare emerging leaders for the challenges they may
face; and how do we model spiritually and developmentally mature
leadership in ways that resonate with them? Professor Andre Delbecq
(1936-2016) of the University of Santa Clara created the heuristic
of "spiritually and developmentally mature leaders" to encapsulate
his observation that outstanding leaders often seemed to draw
strength and wisdom from sources that are not typically studied or
taught in leadership courses. Thirty scholars and practitioners
accepted Delbecq's heuristic as the starting point to explore
spiritual components of leadership that do not easily lend
themselves to quantification or clear causal links. The analysis of
their disciplined engagement with the heuristic forms the
foundation of an exploratory, fully human understanding of
leadership. This analysis is supported by literature reviews,
including an overview of Andre Delbecq's relevant work. Ultimately,
the authors call for further collaboration across disciplines and
between research and practice to build on the conceptual constructs
offered here, and, especially, to create pedagogies for the
training of spiritually and developmentally mature leaders
The models and frameworks described in this book have been applied
successfully in practice at organizations such as Johnson &
Johnson, AT&T, IBM, Facebook, Charles Schwab & Company, and
Accenture. Integrating Change creates a new ontological language
for understanding and transforming the three primary organizational
functions of managing, leading, and integrating. The book can be
used by senior leaders and students of leadership.
The models and frameworks described in this book have been applied
successfully in practice at organizations such as Johnson &
Johnson, AT&T, IBM, Facebook, Charles Schwab & Company, and
Accenture. Integrating Change creates a new ontological language
for understanding and transforming the three primary organizational
functions of managing, leading, and integrating. The book can be
used by senior leaders and students of leadership.
Projects have always been essentially human endeavours. Large
modern projects are generally highly complex, fraught with
technical difficulties and supported by diverse, often apparently
conflicted stakeholders. The spirituality that originally defined
some of the great construction projects of the classical era surely
has a role in project management today. The Spirit of Project
Management explains the context for spirituality in projects and
explores how it can be used to create a larger sense of purpose and
achievement; to help encourage an esprit de corps amongst all those
involved; to act as a touchstone for ethical and sustainable
decision-making. This is a very pragmatic book. The first part
includes an explanation and a variety of useful models for
understanding the significance and value of spirituality in
projects. Judi Neal and Alan Harpham devote the second part of the
book to help you integrate these ideas into your day-to-day
management of projects. Thus there are chapters on spirituality
from the perspective of the individual, the project team, the
project organization and even project management within a
sustainable world framework. Read this book, use the ideas to help
you articulate your projects; engage and sustain your project team
and your stakeholders; and frame how you work in terms of your
organisation, society and the environment.
Conventional measurements of knowledge are usually based on
tangible qualitative and quantitative research, where progress is
manifested incrementally with little visible impact. Though
workplace challenges are rarely examined from a spiritual
perspective, both experience and research efforts have shown that
this vein of thinking can deepen personal intuition and provide
real breakthroughs and transformations for those who might
otherwise feel stuck in their work environment or wider career.
Drawing on author Judi Neal’s wealth of experiences and
observations, Inspiring Workplace Spirituality invites deeper
reflections on the profound questions and issues that conventional
forms of knowledge often fail to encompass. Providing specific
practices and tools for applying internal spirituality on a
day-to-day level, Neal proposes seeing work as sacred. Sharing
accessible stories and examples, she explores the importance of
spiritual values such as gratitude, compassion, and forgiveness
within the workplace. Channelling new ways of perceiving and
responding to everyday challenges, Inspiring Workplace Spirituality
acts as a unique guide for professionals who are ready to elevate
their internal leadership journey and assume the presence and
self-awareness that will enable them to make a positive impact
wherever they work.
Projects have always been essentially human endeavours. Large
modern projects are generally highly complex, fraught with
technical difficulties and supported by diverse, often apparently
conflicted stakeholders. The spirituality that originally defined
some of the great construction projects of the classical era surely
has a role in project management today. The Spirit of Project
Management explains the context for spirituality in projects and
explores how it can be used to create a larger sense of purpose and
achievement; to help encourage an esprit de corps amongst all those
involved; to act as a touchstone for ethical and sustainable
decision-making. This is a very pragmatic book. The first part
includes an explanation and a variety of useful models for
understanding the significance and value of spirituality in
projects. Judi Neal and Alan Harpham devote the second part of the
book to help you integrate these ideas into your day-to-day
management of projects. Thus there are chapters on spirituality
from the perspective of the individual, the project team, the
project organization and even project management within a
sustainable world framework. Read this book, use the ideas to help
you articulate your projects; engage and sustain your project team
and your stakeholders; and frame how you work in terms of your
organisation, society and the environment.
Workplace spirituality is an emerging field of study and practice
and this book asks the questions: Where have we been in the last
ten years as a field and where should we be headed in the next ten
years? The editors asked these questions of thought leaders from
around the globe, leaders who represent different sectors, faith
traditions, worldviews and organizational functions. This volume
represents the best of current thinking about the state of the
field of workplace spirituality and of what the future holds. There
are four themes: (1) management themes such as leadership, ethics,
change management, and diversity; (2) workplace spirituality in
sectors such as health and wellbeing, policing and creative
industries, (3) key issues that are emerging, such as
self-spirituality, mindfulness, storytelling and the importance of
nature, and (4) cutting edge epistemologies and methodologies
including indigenous studies, relational ontology, ethnography, and
psychodynamics. These articles were chosen to provoke new thinking,
new research, and new practice in the field of workplace
spirituality, with the goal of helping the field mature in the next
decade.
While the field of management has developed as a research
discipline over the last century, until the early 1990s there was
essentially no acknowledgement that the human spirit plays an
important role in the workplace. Over the past twenty years, the
tide has begun to turn, as evidenced by the growing number of
courses in academia and in corporate training, and an exponential
increase in the publications emerging through creative interaction
of scholars and practitioners in organizational behaviour,
workplace diversity, sustainability, innovation, corporate
governance, leadership, and corporate wellness, as well as
contributions by psychotherapists, theologians, anthropologists,
educators, philosophers, and artists. This Handbook is the most
comprehensive collection to date of essays by the preeminent
researchers and practitioners in faith and spirituality in the
workplace, featuring not only the most current research and case
examples, but visions of what will be, or should be, emerging over
the horizon. It includes essays by the people who helped to pioneer
the field as well as essays by up and coming young scholars. Among
the questions and issues addressed: * What does it mean to be a
"spiritual" organization? How does this perspective challenge
traditional approaches to the firm as a purely rational,
profit-maximizing enterprise? * Is faith and spirituality in the
workplace a passing fad, or is there a substantial shift occurring
in the business paradigm? * How does this field inform emerging
management disciplines such as sustainability, diversity, and
social responsibility? * In what ways are faith and spirituality in
the workplace similar to progressive and innovative human resource
practices. Does faith and spirituality in the workplace bring
something additional to the conversation, and if so, what? The aim
of The Handbook of Faith and Spirituality in the Workplace is to
provide researchers, faculty, students, and practitioners with a
broad overview of the field from a research perspective, while
keeping an eye on building a bridge between scholarship and
practice.
Another Woman at the Well describes the details of a child growing
up with an alcoholic dad and through the years a life that was
continuing to look for love in all the wrong places, suicide
attempts and feeling much judgment from others; even from the
Christian community. Becoming an addict herself; after 30 years she
found eternal life through Christ Jesus. Judy was born again on
September 17, 1975 and received the baptism in the Holy Spirit a
few weeks later. Even as a Christian she still had tremendous
issues relating to men. Not understanding why her life was so full
of despair, she finally found her purpose for life and how she
pursued that purpose ultimately led her into her divine destiny of
joy unspeakable and full of glory. Judy Neal is an ordained
Minister in the Body of Christ and on staff at Harvest World
Outreach Church in Greensboro, N.C. She has one daughter Misti
Renee' Hardin Coyne. Misti and her husband Joe are Senior Pastors
of Harvest World Outreach Church where Judy is employed as a
Minister and Connections Process Director. She is blessed with two
beautiful grandchildren, Hannah Renee' and Joseph William, the
"apples of her eye" The Word of God has been tested, tried and
proven in Judy's personal life. She has known the heartache and
disappointment of divorce, but she has experienced the grace and
strength of God's Word & His Spirit in being cast down, but not
destroyed Judy not only experienced healing in her heart and
emotions, but also in her physical body. In 1982, she was scheduled
for surgery at the City of Faith Hospital in Tulsa, Oklahoma. After
three months of intense pain, a CAT scan and milligram revealed a
herniated disk and acute sciatica in her lower back. Judy believed
that she was "as healed as she was saved" according to the Word of
God As she continued to believe God for a miracle He performed a
creative miracle in her back...and the surgery was canceled Since
that day God has called Judy to lay hands on the sick and expect
their recovery The Word of God, Prayer, being led by the Spirit of
God & Integrity is first place in Judy's life. She teaches
others how to live a victorious life through Christ Jesus She
ministers a word that is relevant in today's world that can change
lives forever
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