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Human Centered Management in Executive Education provides a
comprehensive insight on innovation in Executive Education with a
unique global scope. The book integrates studies and experiences of
32 distinguished scholars from 15 countries who are working in the
development of theories and practices to advance the human centered
management paradigm, sustainability-based quality standards and
continuous improvement in education. The discussion presents a
well-balanced outlook that combines and contrasts research and
programs from 16 developed and 16 developing countries, and the
visions of 10 female and 22 male authors from North America, South
America, Europe, Asia, the Middle East and Africa.
Human Centered Management and Crises: Disruptions, Resilience,
Wellbeing and Sustainability is the new edited book of the HCM
Series developed to respond to surmounting concerns of global
audiences and human centered scholars, practitioners and students
searching for answers to better and objectively understand the
effects of unprecedented covid-19 pandemic disruptions and ongoing
crises, affecting the wellbeing of people and workplaces since
2019. The effects linger and solutions are pressing. This new HCM
volume presents analytical expertise and practical experiences of a
team of international HCM scholars and practitioners targeting
objective assessment of causes and effects of disruptions and
offering coherent solutions applying HCM principles and practices.
The book chapters include topics dealing with specific problem
solving strategies in numerous industries, among them, higher
education, health care and entrepreneurship. The book will help
readers worldwide to understand the challenges people and
organizations are facing in the present global VUCA (volatile,
uncertain, complex, ambiguous) environment. The audience will
benefit from the book and its purpose to deliver enduring HCM
solutions anchored in the wellbeing of people as precondition for
organizations to secure high performance, quality standards and
long term sustainability.
This book is part of the Human Centered Book Trilogy, the 2021
volumes of the Routledge Human Centered Management HCM Series. HCM
books are pioneering transformation from the traditional
humans-as-a-resource approach of the industrial past, to the humans
at the center management and organizational paradigm of the 21st
century. HCM is built on the talent and wellbeing of people in the
workplace driving work engagement, quality standards, high
performance and productivity to attain long-term organizational
sustainability in the global VUCA (volatile, uncertain, complex,
ambiguous) environment. This book was carefully crafted by
recognized international human centered scholars from four
continents. Models presented bridge persistent Soft Skills gaps in
management and business and particularly between education and the
workforce due to excessive testing and hard/technical skills. In
contrast with hard skills, Soft Skills are transferable across
jobs, industries and applicable to all dimensions of life. Soft
Skills are the common language of empathy, collaboration, team
building, resilience and agility transforming organizations. Human
and social challenges cannot be solved only with hard skills. This
is a "must read Soft Skills manual" for survival and success based
on attributes all human beings possess but not everybody is
optimizing to excel in life and work. This and its two
complementary titles Human Centered Organizational Culture: Global
Dimensions and Sensible Leadership: Human Centered, Insightful and
Prudent are timely readings for leaders, managers, researchers,
academics, practitioners, students and the general public
responsible for organizations across industries and sectors
pursuing quality standards, organizational transformation and
sustainability.
This book is part of the Human Centered Book Trilogy, the 2021
volumes of the Routledge Human Centered Management HCM Series. HCM
books are pioneering transformation from the traditional
humans-as-a-resource approach of the industrial past, to the humans
at the center management and organizational paradigm of the 21st
century. HCM is built on talent and wellbeing of people in the
workplace driving work engagement, quality standards, high
performance and productivity for long-term organizational
sustainability in the global VUCA (volatile, uncertain, complex,
ambiguous) environment. This book was carefully crafted by
recognized international human centered scholars from four
continents. Although all organizations seek to have an optimal
culture, unstoppable disruptions in the VUCA environment easily
derail even the best efforts. Conventional assumptions of culture
as a unifying organizational force are hardly defendable today. HCM
maintains that culture is not only about cohesiveness and consensus
but effective management of conflict and disagreements continuously
testing the capacity of people to work together. This book is about
organizational transformation positioning people at the center.
Complementary chapters integrate as antidotes to overcome
disruptions in the VUCA environment and the effects of the COVID-19
pandemic affecting people and organizations worldwide. This and its
two complementary titles Soft Skills for Human Centered Management
and Global Sustainability and Sensible Leadership: Human Centered,
Insightful and Prudent are timely readings for leaders, managers,
researchers, academics, practitioners, students and the general
public responsible for organizations across industries and sectors
worldwide pursuing quality standards and organizational
transformation to attain sustainability.
Women accomplish nearly two-thirds of total work around the world
(including household duties), comprise one-third of the formal
labor force, but women receive one-tenth of the world's income and
own only one-hundredth of the world's property. Entrepreneurship is
a vehicle for advancing the lives of women around the world. This
book brings together 49 distinguished entrepreneurship scholars to
provide a unique global vision of the wellbeing of women
entrepreneurs necessary for fostering sustainable development and
inclusive societies. Although gender inequality is an important
issue, solutions leading to gender parity are far from reaching
ideal levels in the formal workplace and globally. Meanwhile the
number of women involved in entrepreneurship is growing
exponentially because there are more opportunities for women to own
a business and be their own boss. This offers women the most
desirable and flexible working conditions that better align with
women's lifestyles and multiple family responsibilities. However,
entrepreneurial activities are demanding and complex; compared to
men, women face special challenges that deserve close attention.
This book presents research and programs to effectively support
women entrepreneurs in reaching levels of wellbeing required to
ensure business sustainability and personal prosperity. Offering a
diversity perspectives from around the globe, The Wellbeing of
Women in Entrepreneurship is of great interest to academics and
practitioners working in teaching and research in disciplines
including business management, entrepreneurship, oganizational
change, human centered management, human resources, sustainable
development, and women's studies.
This book is part of the Human Centered Book Trilogy, the 2021
volumes of the Routledge Human Centered Management HCM Series. HCM
books are pioneering transformation from the traditional
humans-as-a-resource approach of the industrial past, to the humans
at the center management and organizational paradigm of the 21st
century. HCM is built on the talent and wellbeing of people in the
workplace driving work engagement, quality standards, high
performance and productivity to attain long-term organizational
sustainability in the global VUCA (volatile, uncertain, complex,
ambiguous) environment. This book was carefully crafted by
recognized international human centered scholars from four
continents. Models presented bridge persistent Soft Skills gaps in
management and business and particularly between education and the
workforce due to excessive testing and hard/technical skills. In
contrast with hard skills, Soft Skills are transferable across
jobs, industries and applicable to all dimensions of life. Soft
Skills are the common language of empathy, collaboration, team
building, resilience and agility transforming organizations. Human
and social challenges cannot be solved only with hard skills. This
is a "must read Soft Skills manual" for survival and success based
on attributes all human beings possess but not everybody is
optimizing to excel in life and work. This and its two
complementary titles Human Centered Organizational Culture: Global
Dimensions and Sensible Leadership: Human Centered, Insightful and
Prudent are timely readings for leaders, managers, researchers,
academics, practitioners, students and the general public
responsible for organizations across industries and sectors
pursuing quality standards, organizational transformation and
sustainability.
Wellbeing in the workplace is an essential element in fostering a
worker's sense of being valued, ensuring their engagement, and
ultimately leading to higher levels of productivity and
organizational performance. This important book specifically adds
to the discussion by taking a global perspective, and evaluates
wellbeing in the workplace in different countries, identifying both
universal issues and specific cultural issues. Chapter authors have
been drawn from across five continents and eleven countries to
provide ground-breaking research in wellbeing from different
regional perspectives, looking at both developed and developing
world scenarios. What is clear throughout the book is that
organizations that are not people-centered undermine their capacity
to attain and maintain quality standards, high performance, and
competitiveness. Organizational concerns about workers' wellbeing
are growing exponentially due to the global VUCA (volatile,
uncertain, complex, ambiguous) environment. In this environment,
organizational success is no longer simply based on short-term
revenue maximization, capital investments, or sales, but
increasingly depends on people's wellbeing, human capital, and the
development of human talent to ensure sustained and sustainable
growth and performance. This book presents a collection of studies
that address current and forthcoming organizational challenges and
offer realistic solutions to support leaders and managers seeking
to balance and value the contribution of people with long-term
organizational performance.
Women accomplish nearly two-thirds of total work around the world
(including household duties), comprise one-third of the formal
labor force, but women receive one-tenth of the world's income and
own only one-hundredth of the world's property. Entrepreneurship is
a vehicle for advancing the lives of women around the world. This
book brings together 49 distinguished entrepreneurship scholars to
provide a unique global vision of the wellbeing of women
entrepreneurs necessary for fostering sustainable development and
inclusive societies. Although gender inequality is an important
issue, solutions leading to gender parity are far from reaching
ideal levels in the formal workplace and globally. Meanwhile the
number of women involved in entrepreneurship is growing
exponentially because there are more opportunities for women to own
a business and be their own boss. This offers women the most
desirable and flexible working conditions that better align with
women's lifestyles and multiple family responsibilities. However,
entrepreneurial activities are demanding and complex; compared to
men, women face special challenges that deserve close attention.
This book presents research and programs to effectively support
women entrepreneurs in reaching levels of wellbeing required to
ensure business sustainability and personal prosperity. Offering a
diversity perspectives from around the globe, The Wellbeing of
Women in Entrepreneurship is of great interest to academics and
practitioners working in teaching and research in disciplines
including business management, entrepreneurship, oganizational
change, human centered management, human resources, sustainable
development, and women's studies.
We have never had more freedom to acquire information to make
decisions, and organizations have never been so pressed to
demonstrate accountability as they communicate with better informed
customers and users. People who work IN an organization must also
work FOR the organization to accomplish its mission. In this
environment, humans are no longer just a resource; they are the
reason an organization exists. New constructs are needed to ensure
this human-centered paradigm shift. This book sets out the
rationale for this shift and stimulates the discussion and the
discovery of effective approaches and solutions to innovate for
social and environmental good. Written by an expert in quality
standards, the book offers a coherent model which synchronizes the
organizational structure with the talent required to develop
resilient and agile work environments. New strategies to develop
talent will be critical, and multidisciplinary approaches from
scholars and practitioners from around the world will be required
to effectively collaborate and articulate the solutions. The
proposition in the book focuses on continuous improvement and
interdisciplinary collaboration between scholars and practitioners
across different industries, sectors, and national borders in order
to address the unavoidable disruptions in the global VUCA
environment.
Wellbeing in the workplace is an essential element in fostering a
worker's sense of being valued, ensuring their engagement, and
ultimately leading to higher levels of productivity and
organizational performance. This important book specifically adds
to the discussion by taking a global perspective, and evaluates
wellbeing in the workplace in different countries, identifying both
universal issues and specific cultural issues. Chapter authors have
been drawn from across five continents and eleven countries to
provide ground-breaking research in wellbeing from different
regional perspectives, looking at both developed and developing
world scenarios. What is clear throughout the book is that
organizations that are not people-centered undermine their capacity
to attain and maintain quality standards, high performance, and
competitiveness. Organizational concerns about workers' wellbeing
are growing exponentially due to the global VUCA (volatile,
uncertain, complex, ambiguous) environment. In this environment,
organizational success is no longer simply based on short-term
revenue maximization, capital investments, or sales, but
increasingly depends on people's wellbeing, human capital, and the
development of human talent to ensure sustained and sustainable
growth and performance. This book presents a collection of studies
that address current and forthcoming organizational challenges and
offer realistic solutions to support leaders and managers seeking
to balance and value the contribution of people with long-term
organizational performance.
This book is part of the Human Centered Book Trilogy, the 2021
volumes of the Routledge Human Centered Management HCM Series. HCM
books are pioneering transformation from the traditional
humans-as-a-resource approach of the industrial past, to the humans
at the center management and organizational paradigm of the 21st
century. HCM is built on talent and wellbeing of people in the
workplace driving work engagement, quality standards, high
performance and productivity for long-term organizational
sustainability in the global VUCA (volatile, uncertain, complex,
ambiguous) environment. This book was carefully crafted by
recognized international human centered scholars from four
continents. Although all organizations seek to have an optimal
culture, unstoppable disruptions in the VUCA environment easily
derail even the best efforts. Conventional assumptions of culture
as a unifying organizational force are hardly defendable today. HCM
maintains that culture is not only about cohesiveness and consensus
but effective management of conflict and disagreements continuously
testing the capacity of people to work together. This book is about
organizational transformation positioning people at the center.
Complementary chapters integrate as antidotes to overcome
disruptions in the VUCA environment and the effects of the COVID-19
pandemic affecting people and organizations worldwide. This and its
two complementary titles Soft Skills for Human Centered Management
and Global Sustainability and Sensible Leadership: Human Centered,
Insightful and Prudent are timely readings for leaders, managers,
researchers, academics, practitioners, students and the general
public responsible for organizations across industries and sectors
worldwide pursuing quality standards and organizational
transformation to attain sustainability.
We, educators, are often so involved in daily teaching duties that
lack time to absorb the broader picture of what is happening beyond
our classrooms in a rapidly changing world. That is the norm in our
profession. But our responsibility is to constantly improve the
wellbeing of all the students enrolled in our classes. Education is
the most important and most challenging profession there is.
Educators shape future leaders, heroes, and people who can improve
the world. Transformational educators have long term effects in the
lives of students that projects on nations. On the opposite side,
students waste time sitting in a classroom and can hamper future
opportunities in life when educators fail to motivate them to
assume responsibility for improving their wellbeing and build a
better world for all. Education is not just another profession, it
is an extraordinary endeavor with surmounting human responsibility
to transform lives for the better. To claim the merit of education,
educators must project education beyond school border into the
context of society and the economy. To miss this context is a
pending challenge. We, educators, need to earn the merit we
deserve. But we now know that we earn merit with knowledge how to
manage for quality and continuous improvement aiming at results
leading to sustainability and working systematically to reach high
standards. Lepeley, author of numerous publications on the subject,
former examiner of the US Baldrige National Quality Award and
adviser to NQAs in six countries in Latin America, presented her
quality management model for education in the World Bank Global
Network in the early 2000's. Her model has pioneered integration of
education with other disciplines and other sectors projecting the
importance and impact of education on sustainable development. The
author emphasizes that neglecting the surmounting demand for
quality will impair education as a fundamental factor of
development, harm the worth of educators, undermine the profession
and dent the wellbeing of human beings in inclusive nations and a
peaceful world.
We, educators, are often so involved in daily teaching duties that
lack time to absorb the broader picture of what is happening beyond
our classrooms in a rapidly changing world. That is the norm in our
profession. But our responsibility is to constantly improve the
wellbeing of all the students enrolled in our classes. Education is
the most important and most challenging profession there is.
Educators shape future leaders, heroes, and people who can improve
the world. Transformational educators have long term effects in the
lives of students that projects on nations. On the opposite side,
students waste time sitting in a classroom and can hamper future
opportunities in life when educators fail to motivate them to
assume responsibility for improving their wellbeing and build a
better world for all. Education is not just another profession, it
is an extraordinary endeavor with surmounting human responsibility
to transform lives for the better. To claim the merit of education,
educators must project education beyond school border into the
context of society and the economy. To miss this context is a
pending challenge. We, educators, need to earn the merit we
deserve. But we now know that we earn merit with knowledge how to
manage for quality and continuous improvement aiming at results
leading to sustainability and working systematically to reach high
standards. Lepeley, author of numerous publications on the subject,
former examiner of the US Baldrige National Quality Award and
adviser to NQAs in six countries in Latin America, presented her
quality management model for education in the World Bank Global
Network in the early 2000's. Her model has pioneered integration of
education with other disciplines and other sectors projecting the
importance and impact of education on sustainable development. The
author emphasizes that neglecting the surmounting demand for
quality will impair education as a fundamental factor of
development, harm the worth of educators, undermine the profession
and dent the wellbeing of human beings in inclusive nations and a
peaceful world.
Investing in People is the world priority of the 21st century. The
wellbeing of people is at the center of the agendas of the World
Bank, International Monetary Fund, UN, OECD, ILO and all major
development organizations. But the concern for people is not new.
The celebrated books of Economics Nobel Awardees Theodore Schultz's
Investing in People. The Economics of Population Quality and Gary
Becker's Human Capital were published decades ago and challenged
the same human dilemma. Yet, with few exceptions, most countries
are still struggling for effective formulas to put people at the
center of development. The core issue is that investing in people
means improving the quality of education for all. But the main
problem is that countries continue to take education as an expense,
not as an investment in people. National budgets consider education
as a sunken cost, rather than as an investment expected to produce
high returns to secure quality improvement as necessary condition
for sustainability. Shortcomings are abundant but one thing is
certain: unless the quality of education for all is placed front
and center in development agendas, chances for progress in the VUCA
(volatile, uncertain, complex, ambiguous) environment are
curtailed, human centered sustainability and wellbeing will be
restrained and inequality will persist. The main problem it is not
income inequality, it is education inequality. In the Knowledge
Economy the human (as) resources formula is no longer working.
Segmentation of the economy and education is probing increasingly
counterproductive. The EDUCONOMY is a human centered structure for
progress to optimize returns and minimize costs of investing in
people. Gallup and Brandon Busteed coined the concept Educonomy to
enhance the importance of quality in education backed up by
extensive surveys and data bases. Lepeley's EDUCONOMY. Unleashing
Wellbeing and Human Centered Sustainable Development takes the
discussion into new dimensions and addresses the complexity of the
challenges. People are the DNA of Sustainable Development. Says
Lepeley challenging old constructs and presenting innovative
formulas pioneering human centered economics and economics of
wellbeing that frame the Balanced Sustainable Development ESTE
(economic, social, technology, environment) Model. ESTE is the
product of the Educonomy built on three fundamental pillars: the
Talent Economy, the Agility Economy and the Quality Economy
convergent with demands of the Knowledge Economy. In the ESTE Model
education is no longer a national expense, it is an investment that
secures high rates of returns and social and economic inclusiveness
anchored in quality standards for all.
Investing in People is the world priority of the 21st century. The
wellbeing of people is at the center of the agendas of the World
Bank, International Monetary Fund, UN, OECD, ILO and all major
development organizations. But the concern for people is not new.
The celebrated books of Economics Nobel Awardees Theodore Schultz's
Investing in People. The Economics of Population Quality and Gary
Becker's Human Capital were published decades ago and challenged
the same human dilemma. Yet, with few exceptions, most countries
are still struggling for effective formulas to put people at the
center of development. The core issue is that investing in people
means improving the quality of education for all. But the main
problem is that countries continue to take education as an expense,
not as an investment in people. National budgets consider education
as a sunken cost, rather than as an investment expected to produce
high returns to secure quality improvement as necessary condition
for sustainability. Shortcomings are abundant but one thing is
certain: unless the quality of education for all is placed front
and center in development agendas, chances for progress in the VUCA
(volatile, uncertain, complex, ambiguous) environment are
curtailed, human centered sustainability and wellbeing will be
restrained and inequality will persist. The main problem it is not
income inequality, it is education inequality. In the Knowledge
Economy the human (as) resources formula is no longer working.
Segmentation of the economy and education is probing increasingly
counterproductive. The EDUCONOMY is a human centered structure for
progress to optimize returns and minimize costs of investing in
people. Gallup and Brandon Busteed coined the concept Educonomy to
enhance the importance of quality in education backed up by
extensive surveys and data bases. Lepeley's EDUCONOMY. Unleashing
Wellbeing and Human Centered Sustainable Development takes the
discussion into new dimensions and addresses the complexity of the
challenges. People are the DNA of Sustainable Development. Says
Lepeley challenging old constructs and presenting innovative
formulas pioneering human centered economics and economics of
wellbeing that frame the Balanced Sustainable Development ESTE
(economic, social, technology, environment) Model. ESTE is the
product of the Educonomy built on three fundamental pillars: the
Talent Economy, the Agility Economy and the Quality Economy
convergent with demands of the Knowledge Economy. In the ESTE Model
education is no longer a national expense, it is an investment that
secures high rates of returns and social and economic inclusiveness
anchored in quality standards for all.
We have never had more freedom to acquire information to make
decisions, and organizations have never been so pressed to
demonstrate accountability as they communicate with better informed
customers and users. People who work IN an organization must also
work FOR the organization to accomplish its mission. In this
environment, humans are no longer just a resource; they are the
reason an organization exists. New constructs are needed to ensure
this human-centered paradigm shift. This book sets out the
rationale for this shift and stimulates the discussion and the
discovery of effective approaches and solutions to innovate for
social and environmental good. Written by an expert in quality
standards, the book offers a coherent model which synchronizes the
organizational structure with the talent required to develop
resilient and agile work environments. New strategies to develop
talent will be critical, and multidisciplinary approaches from
scholars and practitioners from around the world will be required
to effectively collaborate and articulate the solutions. The
proposition in the book focuses on continuous improvement and
interdisciplinary collaboration between scholars and practitioners
across different industries, sectors, and national borders in order
to address the unavoidable disruptions in the global VUCA
environment.
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