|
Showing 1 - 6 of
6 matches in All Departments
Humanistic management has been part of a growing conversation about
a different approach to management that contributes to dignity in
the workplace and better organisations overall. The theoretical
concepts have mostly derived from developed countries. This book
seeks to redress the balance and looks at the development and
application of the concepts, approaches and models of inequality,
corruption, poverty, and uncertainty in the context of Latin
America. The book provides a comprehensive overview of what is
happening in Latin America in terms of Humanistic Management and
the promotion of the Sustainable Development Goals. The first
section describes the development of Humanistic Management by
reviewing two different schools that have strongly influenced the
discipline: the Montreal School and the Saint Gallen School.
Humanistic Management is then presented as a model that can be used
by scholars and practitioners in Latin America. The third part aims
to explore how Humanistic Management has been, and could be,
implemented across different organizations and business sectors in
Latin America. Part four examines the implications of Humanistic
Management for external stakeholders such as customers and
consumers, suppliers, community, government, and universities.
Finally, the conclusion provides new approaches to Humanistic
Management for Latin America. Humanistic Management in Latin
America will serve as a key reference and resource for teachers,
researchers, students, experts and policy makers, who want to
acquire a broad understanding of social responsibility and business
across the world.
Humanistic management has been part of a growing conversation about
a different approach to management that contributes to dignity in
the workplace and better organisations overall. The theoretical
concepts have mostly derived from developed countries. This book
seeks to redress the balance and looks at the development and
application of the concepts, approaches and models of inequality,
corruption, poverty, and uncertainty in the context of Latin
America. The book provides a comprehensive overview of what is
happening in Latin America in terms of Humanistic Management and
the promotion of the Sustainable Development Goals. The first
section describes the development of Humanistic Management by
reviewing two different schools that have strongly influenced the
discipline: the Montreal School and the Saint Gallen School.
Humanistic Management is then presented as a model that can be used
by scholars and practitioners in Latin America. The third part aims
to explore how Humanistic Management has been, and could be,
implemented across different organizations and business sectors in
Latin America. Part four examines the implications of Humanistic
Management for external stakeholders such as customers and
consumers, suppliers, community, government, and universities.
Finally, the conclusion provides new approaches to Humanistic
Management for Latin America. Humanistic Management in Latin
America will serve as a key reference and resource for teachers,
researchers, students, experts and policy makers, who want to
acquire a broad understanding of social responsibility and business
across the world.
Drawing on draftsmanship, painting, literature, and installations,
Michael Tedja's oeuvre erupts into a flamboyant and visually
playful whole. His boisterous storms of imagery recall the CoBrA
movement of artists from Copenhagen, Brussels and Amsterdam briefly
banded together after World War II. Aiming to banish bourgeois
rituals as well as theorizing around avant-garde art, they embraced
expressionist spontaneity, an unrestrained use of vivid colors,
folkloric elements, handwriting and graffiti. But Michael Tedja has
taken out the folkloric and anti-intellectual, his painting is a
kind of IQ test. With abstract and figurative visual vocabulary
complementing each other, Tedja's imagery is expressive and
linguistic, full of references and autobiographical elements. This
monograph encompasses large-scale paintings, his overwhelming
installation of large drawings Hypersubjective, as well as The
Color Guide Series. Here, Tedja deploys textured paint, crayon and
chalk on commercial paper stock-the color bars printed along the
paper's edge are left exposed-turning mass-produced standard into
something decidedly unique. Yet by constantly recycling and
repurposing images, Tedja explores the alterability of meaning
within the visual context of globalization.
|
You may like...
Higher
Michael Buble
CD
(1)
R471
Discovery Miles 4 710
|