Tribal Wisdom for Business Ethics 1st Edition by Grace Ann Rosile – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 9781786352880 ,1786352885
Full download Tribal Wisdom for Business Ethics 1st Edition after payment
Product details:
ISBN 10: 1786352885
ISBN 13: 9781786352880
Author: Grace Ann Rosile
Tribal Wisdom for Business Ethics 1st Edition Table of contents:
Part I: Wisdom of the Elders
1 Eight Aspects of Tribal Wisdom for Business Ethics, and Why They Matter
Eight Aspects of Tribal Wisdom and Relevance for Business Ethics
Three Reasons for Applying Tribal Wisdom to Business Ethics
References
2 Indigenous Ways of Knowing and Quantum Science for Business Ethics
3 Indigenous Ways of Knowing and Business Sustainability
Wisdom of the Elders
Relating Harmoniously to One’s Environment
References
4 Indigenous Science for Business Ethics and the Environment
5 Business Ethics Overview and Current Trends
Four (4) Ethical Contexts for Businesses
References
Part II: Storytelling and Indigenous Pedagogies for Business Ethics
6 A Coyote Story for Business Ethics Pedagogy
Implications of Storytelling for Business Ethics Pedagogy
Reference
7 But that’s Not a Story! Antenarrative Dialectics Between and Beneath Indigenous Living Story and
How Living Story and Indigenous Story are Antenarrative Aspects of Storytelling
References
8 So, What Does it Mean? Mysterious Practices of Indigenous Storytellers
References
Part III: Trade, Barter, and Ethical Business Relationships
9 Ethical Business Practices in Dardan Enterprises
Ethics is What You Do
Reference
10 Native American Values Applied to Leadership and Business Ethics Education
Introduction
Seven Grandfather Teachings
Cherokee Nation under Chad “Corntassel” Smith
Sa’ah Naagháí Bik’eh Hózhoon
Implications for Business Ethics Education
Implications for Business
Conclusion
References
11 Early North American Trading Practice and Philosophy
Differences in Values
Summary
References
12 Power Stories and Mutually Beneficial Negotiations: Fostering Ensemble Leadership
Power and Equal Power Relationships
Leadership and Heterarchical Organization
References
13 Native American Entrepreneurship: Locating Your Business.
Clusters and Competitive Advantage
Clusters and Native American Entrepreneurship
Tribal Gaming and Native American Entrepreneurship
Performance and Business Location
What Would You Do?
References
Part IV: Business Ethics Education in Partnership with the Natural Environment
14 Remember to Remember: The Alameda Transit Station
Reference
15 Critique of the Triple Bottom Line
The SOS Dialectic of Two Spirits
A Shift in Critical Pedagogy to a Critical Ecological Pedagogy
Paradigm Shift to Dialectic Model of Sustainability
Conclusions
References
Appendix A: A Brief History of NMSU Sustainability — see more complete history at http://davidboje
16 Songs of the Pika and Others at the Bighorn Medicine Wheel
Recent Background Tones Contributing to the Songs Now Expressed
Entangled Melodies
Songs of Roads, Fences, and Guards
References
17 The Trees are Breathing Us: An Indigenous View of Relationship in Nature and Business
Opening
It Takes Two to Know One
Working Agreements
Showing up Ready
Strength to Strength
Risk to Gain
Capital “T” Trust
Working/Living in Relationship
Nature is Our Nature
Non-Comparative Perception
Deep Listening, Talking Circle, and Dialogue
Remembering
Conclusion: Responses of the Non-indigenous Business World to Indigenous Initiatives
18 Weaving IWOK into the Storying of Business, Ethics, and the Busy-Ness of Being Human
Changing by Being Differently in the World
Why am I Drawn to Indigenous Storying?
Change is Inevitable, Change is Necessary — but from What to What?
In What Ways Can I be Part of the Re-storying of Humanity?
References
19 Tribal Wisdom in Today’s Business Environment
Epilogue: What Does It Mean?
References
About the Authors
Index
People also search for Tribal Wisdom for Business Ethics 1st Edition:
tribal knowledge meaning in business
difference between indian ethics and western ethics
ethics in indian tradition
chinese ethics vs american ethics
tribal knowledge in the workplace
Tags: Grace Ann Rosile, Tribal Wisdom, Business Ethics