A critical examination of the complex and revealing questions we must ask ourselves about our work and the value it brings to ourselves and others.
Between Wounded Knee and My Lai another American atrocity occurred- bigger than either of them, yet today largely forgotten. But for the existence of a single photograph, it would have been entirely lost in time.
For the fifteenth anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall: The bittersweet memoir of a young East German woman, searching for her country and herself
From the author of Work Won't Love You Back, a stirring examination of how collective grief can ignite powerful change
After receiving his PhD in theoretical physics from Dartmouth College, Lee Phillips worked for several decades as a... Læs mere
From a leading scholar of sports and race, a story of two pioneering Black quarterbacks--one who became the first to win a Super Bowl, and one who couldn't make it in the racist world of the NFL.
A strategic roadmap that will transform your company into an employee-first powerhouse, unlocking a competitive edge for enduring success.
The inside story of the Super Bowl champion 1986 Giants, the extraordinary friendships that resulted--and stunning revelations about the hardships they faced, based on new interviews with Bill Parcells, Phil Simms, Mark Bavaro, and Bill Belichick.
Two experts reveal the remarkable qualities that allow family businesses to thrive in some of the world's toughest and most daunting market conditions providing vital lessons for businesses everywhere.
The most important aspect of early childhood in general and education in particular is the quality and care of the relationships a child forms. Love to Learn shows how to build and develop these relationships -- and unlock every child's true potential.
A powerful argument that finding meaning at work is the most powerful driver for employee happiness, talent retention, and profit, and a roadmap for exceptional leaders to make it the cornerstone of their management approach.
Affirmative action was never the right answer. In Class Matters, Richard Kahlenberg persuasively shows that a new class-based approach to college admissions can produce economic and racial diversity alike-- and greater fairness.