. The Growth of Business: From Then to Now 2. The Twenieth Century in America: Setting the Stage 3. Ambivalent Views Toward Modern Days' Business 4. A New Insights in a New Millennium 5. Buddhism Some Foundational Notes 6. Main Vehicles in Buddhism 7. The Place of Suffering and Harming in Our Lives 8. Business and Buddhism: Friends or Foes 9. A Closer Look at the Points of Caution 10. Buddhist Business Leaders in Action
Joan Marques serves as director of the BBA program and is assistant professor of management at Woodbury University, USA. She has published in the Journal of Business Ethics, the Journal of Management Development, and Business and Society, and has authored or co-authored nine books on management and leadership topics.
Uniting the vehicles of business and management with those of the
Buddhist tradition from a secular angle, this book presents us a
fascinating opportunity to reconsider many of the concepts we
practiced habitually yet not always mindfully. It provides us
insights and tools to perform with more tranquility toward
relationships that are based on mutual respect in an increasingly
interrelated world. -- Tsoknyi Rinpoche, Pundarika Foundation,
USA.This book carefully brings together two worlds that are often
considered incompatible: the business environment with its
ambition, competition, and profit orientation, and Buddhist
psychology with its principles of selflessness, tolerance, and
non-harming: An important foundation for considerations about
future performance as we move deeper into the twenty-first century.
-- Marshall Goldsmith, Dartmouth Tuck School of Business, USA.This
is a highly engaging overview of business and Buddhism. Business
needs Buddhist insights, and Buddhism needs insights from business.
-- Ian I. Mitroff, Saint Louis University, USA.A book for the
thoughtful, enlightened leader who is looking for ways to build a
business that aligns with the motivations of his soul. -- Richard
Barrett, Chairman and Founder of the Barrett Values Centre, UK.By
providing an excellent outline of Buddhist principles and how they
can be applied to business, Dr. Marques presents a unique
perspective on leadership. A major strength of the book is that Dr.
Marques has not just studied the Buddhist principles she describes,
but she also has experientially lived them. -- Jerry Biberman,
University of Scranton, USADr. Marques provides a uniquely balanced
approach to the integration of Buddhism and organizations,
including both the optimistic and the cautionary sides of applying
Buddhist principles to the workplace. Real examples of leaders who
have enacted Buddhist practices in their work lives provide
suggestions that are both helpful and actionable for readers. It is
inspiring to think about the kind of positive changes that could be
enacted in today’s work environments if more business leaders
followed the practices described in helpful detail in this book. --
Dana Sumpter, California State University, USA
Uniting the vehicles of business and management with those of the
Buddhist tradition from a secular angle, this book presents us a
fascinating opportunity to reconsider many of the concepts we
practiced habitually yet not always mindfully. It provides us
insights and tools to perform with more tranquility toward
relationships that are based on mutual respect in an increasingly
interrelated world. -- Tsoknyi Rinpoche, Pundarika Foundation,
USA.This book carefully brings together two worlds that are often
considered incompatible: the business environment with its
ambition, competition, and profit orientation, and Buddhist
psychology with its principles of selflessness, tolerance, and
non-harming: An important foundation for considerations about
future performance as we move deeper into the twenty-first century.
-- Marshall Goldsmith, Dartmouth Tuck School of Business, USA.This
is a highly engaging overview of business and Buddhism. Business
needs Buddhist insights, and Buddhism needs insights from business.
-- Ian I. Mitroff, Saint Louis University, USA.A book for the
thoughtful, enlightened leader who is looking for ways to build a
business that aligns with the motivations of his soul. -- Richard
Barrett, Chairman and Founder of the Barrett Values Centre, UK.By
providing an excellent outline of Buddhist principles and how they
can be applied to business, Dr. Marques presents a unique
perspective on leadership. A major strength of the book is that Dr.
Marques has not just studied the Buddhist principles she describes,
but she also has experientially lived them. -- Jerry Biberman,
University of Scranton, USADr. Marques provides a uniquely balanced
approach to the integration of Buddhism and organizations,
including both the optimistic and the cautionary sides of applying
Buddhist principles to the workplace. Real examples of leaders who
have enacted Buddhist practices in their work lives provide
suggestions that are both helpful and actionable for readers. It is
inspiring to think about the kind of positive changes that could be
enacted in today’s work environments if more business leaders
followed the practices described in helpful detail in this book. --
Dana Sumpter, California State University, USA This book by Marques
(business, Woodbury Univ.) aligns with the increasing attention of
business management to soft skills such as emotional intelligence
and effective listening. The book fosters stakeholder inclusion and
is supportive of diversity, considering leadership styles
characterized as respectful (trust), engaged (mentoring), awakened
(compassionate and ethical), and authentic (self-reflection). As “a
way of living righteously by keeping our minds awake," Buddhism
helps its followers make decisions with a focus on the well-being
of all stakeholders and support unselfish teamwork. Summing Up:
Recommended. With reservations. Lower-division undergraduates
through professionals and practitioners.--C. Wankel, St. John's
University, New York, CHOICE October 2015
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