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Managing Smart (Hardcover)
Matt Treger, Lynne Milgram, M.D., MBA, Alan Spector, Ph.D., M.D.
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R2,183
Discovery Miles 21 830
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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'Managing Smart' examines the challenges facing today's management
and provides fast, practical answers for solving common workplace
situations. It presents step-by-step instructions for mastering
more than 300 key real-world management tasks. This condensed
business guide includes information on: * Leadership techniques *
Labor management * Strategic planning * Time management * Marketing
and sales techniques * Career development * Key business concepts *
Management tools * Information systems Among many other management
topics, 'Managing Smart' also shows you how to: * Set project goals
and priorities * Increase efficiency * Comply with employment and
labor benefits * Manage finances Management professionals and
novices alike will improve their effectiveness, skills, and
knowledge with these concise reference tips.
This book examines the active role of urban citizens in
constructing alternative urban spaces as tangible resistance
towards capitalist production of urban spaces that continue to
encroach various neighborhoods, lanes, commons, public land and
other spaces of community life and livelihoods. The collection of
narratives presented here brings together research from ten
different Asian cities and re-theorises the city from the
perspective of ordinary people facing moments of crisis,
contestations, and cooperative quests to create alternative spaces
to those being produced under prevailing urban processes. The
chapters accent the exercise of human agency through daily
practices in the production of urban space and the intention is not
one of creating a romantic or utopian vision of what a city "by and
for the people" ought to be. Rather, it is to place people in the
centre as mediators of city-making with discontents about current
conditions and desires for a better life.
Norms and Illegality: Intimate Ethnographies and Politics explores
liminal and illegal practices in relation to political control and
cultural normativity. The contributors draw on years of
ethnographic experiences in Greece, Guatemala, Hong Kong, Italy,
Madagascar, Mali, Philippines, and Thailand to study the
contradictions of what is legal and illegal. They explore the
production of illegal subjects by the state, the creation of
illegal and normative values by liminal and illegal actors, and the
mutual entanglements of legal and illegal in the public domains of
markets and trade networks. This volume shows that criminalization
policies are not necessarily oriented toward erasing crime.
Instead, the contributors maintain that opaque spaces ensure the
efficacy of control and outwardly conform to the rhetoric and
ethics of global neoliberalism. Within these contexts, the
contributors shed light on moral economies and frames of value
entailed in systems of representation that have been set up by
individuals who are deemed illegal, liminal, or deviant in their
confrontations with the state.
In Economics and Morality, the authors seek to illuminate the
multiple kinds of analyses relating morality and economic behavior
in particular kinds of economic systems. The chapters explore
economic systems from a variety of diverse indigenous and
capitalist societies, focusing on moral challenges in non-Western
economic systems undergoing profound change, grassroots movements
and moral claims in the context of capitalism, and morality-based
movements taking place within corporate and state institutions. The
anthropological insights of each chapter provide the value of
firsthand fieldwork and ethnographic investigation, as well as the
tradition of critically studying non-Western and Western societies.
Because the moral challenges in a given capitalist society can no
longer be effectively addressed without considering the interaction
and influences of different societies in the global system, the
international ethnographic research in this book can help document
and make sense of the changes sweeping our planet.
This book focuses on the economic, political, social, and cultural
dynamics of street economies across the urban Global South.
Although contestations over public space have a long history,
Street Economies in the Urban Global South presents the argument
that the recent conjuncture of neoliberal economic policies and
unprecedented urban growth in the Global South has changed the
equation. The detailed ethnographic accounts from postsocialist
Vietnam to a struggling democracy in the Philippines, from the
former command economies in Africa to previously authoritarian
regimes in Latin America, focus on the experiences of often
marginalised street workers who describe their projects and plans.
The contributors to Street Economies in the Urban Global South
highlight individual and collective resistance by street vendors to
overcome numerous processes that exacerbate the marginality and
disempowerment of street economy work.
In Economics and Morality, the authors seek to illuminate the
multiple kinds of analyses relating morality and economic behavior
in particular kinds of economic systems. The chapters explore
economic systems from a variety of diverse indigenous and
capitalist societies, focusing on moral challenges in non-Western
economic systems undergoing profound change, grassroots movements
and moral claims in the context of capitalism, and morality-based
movements taking place within corporate and state institutions. The
anthropological insights of each chapter provide the value of
firsthand fieldwork and ethnographic investigation, as well as the
tradition of critically studying non-Western and Western societies.
Because the moral challenges in a given capitalist society can no
longer be effectively addressed without considering the interaction
and influences of different societies in the global system, the
international ethnographic research in this book can help document
and make sense of the changes sweeping our planet.
In this exciting new volume from the Society for Economic
Anthropology, Cynthia Werner and Duran Bell bring together a group
of distinguished anthropologists and economists to discuss the
complex ways in which different cultures imbue material objects
with symbolic qualities whose value cannot be reduced to material
or monetary equivalents. Objects with sacred or symbolic qualities
are valued quite differently than mundane objects, and the
contributors to this volume set out to unravel how and why. In the
first of three sections, the authors consider the extent to which
sacred objects can or cannot be exchanged between individuals
(e.g., ancestral objects, land, dreaming stories). In the next
section, contributors discuss the value and power of markets,
money, and credit. They consider theoretical models for
understanding money transactions, competing currencies, and the
power of credit among marginalized groups around the globe. The
last section examines the ways in which contemporary people bestow
symbolic value on some objects (e.g., family heirlooms,
pre-Columbian artifacts, fashion goods) and finally how some
individuals themselves are valued in monetary and symbolic ways.
With its emphasis on the interplay of cultural and economic values,
this volume will be a vital resource for economists and economic
anthropologists. Published in cooperation with the Society for
Economic Anthropology. Visit their web page.
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