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"Why are we so important?"; "What value do we add?"; and "What good
do we create?" These are the opening questions posed to management
educators in this book. This is followed by uncomfortable questions
about colonization (Who is in the centre and whose knowledge
counts?) and inequality (Whom do we exclude?). After questioning
the easy adoption of technology (What are we embracing?) and the
challenge posed by global warming (Can management education help
stop climate change?), the author ends by sketching some leadership
lessons required for the future: "What lessons can we learn in a
black swan event?" Mixing philosophical analyses with anecdotes
from experience, the author does not shy away from discussing
controversial views to give direction to current debates. Tracing
eight such crucial questions and providing well-researched
perspectives, this book is an engaging read for anyone interested
in the future direction of business schools in particular and
management education in general. "There are many books and articles
on business education, but few as deep and insightful as
Contemporary Management Education. I enthusiastically recommend it
to anyone who seeks to understand and improve the training of
business leaders." Peter Tufano, Said Business School, University
of Oxford "An amazing read. Piet Naude is eclectic and sparkling.
He applies his talents to the wicked maze of management education
in society. No issue is more important for global business. No
writer is better qualified." Thomas Donaldson, The Wharton School,
University of Pennsylvania "A powerful, persuasive, and superbly
compelling book. Contemporary Management Education serves as an
invaluable and informative reference to the essential issues that
are shaping the future." Sherif Kamel, Dean, School of Business,
The American University in Cairo
"Why are we so important?"; "What value do we add?"; and "What good
do we create?" These are the opening questions posed to management
educators in this book. This is followed by uncomfortable questions
about colonization (Who is in the centre and whose knowledge
counts?) and inequality (Whom do we exclude?). After questioning
the easy adoption of technology (What are we embracing?) and the
challenge posed by global warming (Can management education help
stop climate change?), the author ends by sketching some leadership
lessons required for the future: "What lessons can we learn in a
black swan event?" Mixing philosophical analyses with anecdotes
from experience, the author does not shy away from discussing
controversial views to give direction to current debates. Tracing
eight such crucial questions and providing well-researched
perspectives, this book is an engaging read for anyone interested
in the future direction of business schools in particular and
management education in general. "There are many books and articles
on business education, but few as deep and insightful as
Contemporary Management Education. I enthusiastically recommend it
to anyone who seeks to understand and improve the training of
business leaders." Peter Tufano, Said Business School, University
of Oxford "An amazing read. Piet Naude is eclectic and sparkling.
He applies his talents to the wicked maze of management education
in society. No issue is more important for global business. No
writer is better qualified." Thomas Donaldson, The Wharton School,
University of Pennsylvania "A powerful, persuasive, and superbly
compelling book. Contemporary Management Education serves as an
invaluable and informative reference to the essential issues that
are shaping the future." Sherif Kamel, Dean, School of Business,
The American University in Cairo
This volume exhibits the engaging and challenging work of public
and ecumenical theologian Piet Naude. The collection of 26 essays,
written over three decades, constitutes an important contribution
to public theology by critically and creatively evaluating diverse
pathways through the landscape of Ecumenical, African and Reformed
theologies.
Adoption of a new confession is a rare event in the history of the
church. Neither Calendar nor Clock tells the story of the Belhar
Confession, adopted in draft form in 1982 by the colored Dutch
Reformed Mission Church in South Africa.
Piet J. Naud here examines how churches both inside and outside
South Africa reacted to this new confession. He further considers
the question of how an African confession speaks in the
twenty-first century by reinterpreting Belhar through its three
middle articles unity, reconciliation, and justice and relates it
to contemporary issues like gender rights, HIV/AIDS, and economic
justice.
To understand the no of the confession, Naud analyzes the
theological ideology against which Belhar witnessed. To give
insight into the yes of the confession, he draws out the link
between Belhar and the apostolic faith of the ancient Nicene creed.
In so doing, he reveals how this African confession is important
for the universal church today.
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