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Through a collection and analysis of carefully selected readings,
Rethinking Debatable Moments in the Civil Rights Movement: Learning
for the Present Moment highlights particular issues, tensions, and
dynamics within the Civil Rights Movement. The text asks pointed
questions regarding debatable moments of the Civil Rights Movement
in order to encourage critical study, stimulate thinking about
possible consequences then and now, seek answers or refine the
questions, and seek direction for the present moment. The readings
are organized in chapters according to the debatable moments: 1)
Should the NAACP have pursued the case of Claudette Colvin in
combating bus segregation in Montgomery?; 2) Should Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr., have joined the Freedom Riders when invited to do
so in 1961?; 3) Should children have been allowed to participate in
the Birmingham Campaign protests in 1963?; 4) Should SNCC's John
Lewis have agreed to amend his speech in the 1963 March on
Washington?; and 5) Should Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., have turned
the marchers around at the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma after
Bloody Sunday? General and chapter introductions and an epilogue
explore the context, the key players, the issues, the nature of the
crisis, and the consequences and implications of each debatable
moment. Rethinking Debatable Moments in the Civil Rights Movement
is an excellent supplementary text for courses in anthropology,
sociology, black studies, and related social science disciplines.
The first such work in English by a western Muslim, Lex Hixon's
poetic translations of selected Quranic passages make the mystical
teachings of Islam clear and accessible to the Western reader.
This book challenges the roots and elements of the existing
dominant paradigm of management, which can legitimize artless
practices and result in dysfunction, and proposes an alternative
based on a different understanding of human nature and social and
economic life. This paradigm is designed to bring about the
conception of organizations as wholes rather than assemblies of
disembodied fragments, with managers as facilitators of the work of
others and shapers of culture, with a clear sense of purpose and a
moral compass. Such a paradigm would result in a practice of
management that is more competent, more purposeful, and more
ethical, based on a more accurate and complete comprehension of
reality. This book sets forth a more optimistic understanding of
human nature and collective life, and the hope that we can be and
do better. It is a major contribution to the field of management
and will benefit academics, managers, and consultants working in
the fields of organizational development and strategic change.
2000 years after Jesus walked the earth people are still searching for answers to who he really was and what he really taught. What if, after thousands of years, we were to discover a new slant on Jesus' words? For example, traditional teaching has translated the word "good" as Jesus used it as in "a good tree brings forth good fruit". In Aramaic however, the word was actually "ripe". The meaning shifts completely from black and white morality (good versus evil) to a lesson on nature and the value of time. With this direct translation and alternative slant, this text offers an altogether different look at what we've always thought the Bible really said.
This book challenges the roots and elements of the existing
dominant paradigm of management, which can legitimize artless
practices and result in dysfunction, and proposes an alternative
based on a different understanding of human nature and social and
economic life. This paradigm is designed to bring about the
conception of organizations as wholes rather than assemblies of
disembodied fragments, with managers as facilitators of the work of
others and shapers of culture, with a clear sense of purpose and a
moral compass. Such a paradigm would result in a practice of
management that is more competent, more purposeful, and more
ethical, based on a more accurate and complete comprehension of
reality. This book sets forth a more optimistic understanding of
human nature and collective life, and the hope that we can be and
do better. It is a major contribution to the field of management
and will benefit academics, managers, and consultants working in
the fields of organizational development and strategic change.
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The Railroad (Paperback)
Rachel Bostwick; Edited by Kathy Broggy; Neil Douglas Newton
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R420
Discovery Miles 4 200
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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