Training a "New" Consciousness
In: Administrative theory & praxis: ATP ; a quarterly journal of dialogue in public administration theory, Volume 28, Issue 2, p. 208-224
ISSN: 1949-0461
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In: Administrative theory & praxis: ATP ; a quarterly journal of dialogue in public administration theory, Volume 28, Issue 2, p. 208-224
ISSN: 1949-0461
A new consciousness in business -- A personal experience : the Frederick Chavalit Tsao story -- An organization journey : the IMC story -- Sixteen exemplar companies -- The quantum leadership model -- The science of connectedness -- How the practices elevate our consciousness -- Selecting the practices that are right for you.
Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- About the Author -- Abbreviations -- List of Figures -- Chapter 1: (The) U.S. Military: (My) Service -- Introduction -- Joining -- Where I Come From -- From Pom-Poms to Combat Boots -- Doing Time -- Initial Entry Training -- Time in Service -- Freedom Rings -- Lower Your Head and Drive On -- Little Things -- Works Cited -- Chapter 2: My Veteran Identity (Crisis): Suicides and Reintegration -- Fall 2014: Feeling Loss -- Winter 2015: Seeing What I Lost -- Spring 2015: Finding Myself in the Loss -- Searching for Answers: Veteran Suicides -- Conceptualizing Veteran Reintegration -- Military Assimilation -- Military Culture -- Military-Civilian Divide -- Works Cited -- Chapter 3: Writing Through Layers of Veteran Liminality -- Theoretical Framework: Liminality -- Sacred Liminality: "Communitas" -- Institutionalized Liminality: Belonging to a Total Institution -- My Research and Writing Process -- Autoethnography -- Writing Autoethnography Performatively -- Autoarcheology: Military Artifacts as Symbols of Liminality -- Works Cited -- Chapter 4: Loss of Community: Searching for and Finding Home -- Spring 2015-Winter 2016: Building My Self Communally -- Spring 2016: Facing my Community -- Works Cited -- Chapter 5: Loss of Structure: Resisting and Finding (My) Voice -- Fall 2016: Resolving Ambivalence -- Winter 2017: A New Redemption -- Spring 2017: Duality and Liminality -- Works Cited -- Chapter 6: You Can't Go Back -- Freedom: "Give me Liberty or Give me Death!" -- Freedom Isn't Free -- Freedom?: Give me Liberty (of Self) or Give me (Psychological) Death! -- Assimilating -- Serving -- Separating -- I am No Hero, nor am I Wounded -- Works Cited -- Chapter 7: Adapt and Overcome -- Building Blocks -- Model for Analyzing Human Adaptation to Transition -- Theory of Differential Adaptation.
In: Springer eBook Collection
Chapter 1: [The] U.S. Military Veterans: [My] Examination of Identity -- Chapter 2: My Veteran Identity [Crisis]: Suicides And Reintegration -- Chapter 3: Writing Through Layers Of Veteran Liminality -- Chapter 4: Loss Of Community: Searching For And Finding Home -- Chapter 5: Loss Of Structure: Resisting And Finding [My] Voice -- Chapter 6: You Can't Go Back -- Chapter 7: Adapt And Overcome. .
In: Administrative theory & praxis: ATP ; a quarterly journal of dialogue in public administration theory, Volume 28, Issue 2, p. 208-224
ISSN: 1084-1806
In: The Indian economic and social history review: IESHR, Volume 16, Issue 1, p. 1-31
ISSN: 0973-0893
The world is changing and the chief engine of this change is the growing understanding of nonlocality. This book examines how the new consciousness taking hold will reorganize society into grassroots networks like those revealed through quantum physics' understanding of energy and information waves and experienced daily by millions through social media.
In: Estudos feministas, Volume 13, Issue 3, p. 720-737
ISSN: 1806-9584
Este ensaio propõe uma leitura de "La conciencia de la mestiza/Towards a New Consciousness", de Gloria Anzaldúa, entretecida de um diálogo que busca possíveis pontos que unem as modalidades de pensar as identidades chicana e latino-americana, já que a obsessão sul-americana e caribenha pela identidade gerou inúmeros textos, tanto teóricos quanto ficcionais (inclusive os que, como o de Anzaldúa, deslizam entre um e outro gênero), que resistem à polarização (mesmo quando a incorporam), através do reconhecimento de uma cultura complexa, multi-facetada, em que os textos do colonizador/colonizado, opressor/oprimido, cultura dominante/cultura dominada são inextricáveis.
In: Anthropology and the New Cosmopolitanism : Rooted, Feminist and Vernacular Perspectives
In: International journal of social sciences: IJoSS, Volume V, Issue 1, p. 27-46
ISSN: 1804-980X