Wednesday, December 31, 2008

People Count or Maine Real Estate

People Count!: The Networked Individual in World Politics

Author: Rosenau

People Count! rests on a single but important premise: As the world shrinks and becomes ever more complex, so have people—as 'networked individuals'—become ever more central to the course of events. The age of the nation-state has yielded to the age of the individual, and no one is better qualified than distinguished scholar James N. Rosenau to track this shift in prose that sings. Here he investigates the myriad ways in which 'people count' in global politics. Tracing developments in globalization, demography, and the skills revolution, Rosenau profiles 17 different groups and shows how and why they matter on the world scene. Along the way, he tells the fascinating back stories behind the roles that people play: Who the terrorists are, why soldiers fight, how citizens and immigrants compare, what connects the networkers, where travelers feel at home, and when the here and now takes a back seat to another world. This book seeks to depict a new era by analyzing the basic roles people occupy in their family, community, and society, including the wider world.



New interesting book: Diabetes or Yoga for Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders

Maine Real Estate: Principles and Practices

Author: Elaine Richer

Using a clear, concise writing style, the author presents step-by-step explanations with examples requiring no previous background in the subject. The text has been completely updated fully preparing users with the appropriate material, guidance, and practice to enable them to become a successful Real Estate practitioner after passing the real estate licensing exam. Practical study features aid individuals in understanding and retaining relevant information.



Table of Contents:
Illustrations
Preface
1Introduction to Real Estate Principles2
2Licensing of Real Estate Brokers, Associate Brokers, and Sales Agents16
3Property Ownership and Interests28
4Law of Agency54
5Fundamentals of Contract Law68
6The Listing and Valuation Processes94
7Landlord-Tenant Laws122
8Land Use Controls136
9Real Estate Financing150
10Real Estate Financing Practices168
11Selling: Practices and Procedures188
12Transfer of Title to Real Property196
13Closing Real Estate Transactions212
14Fair Housing226
15Tax Implications of Real Estate Ownership and Transactions238
16Real Estate Math254
App. AReal Estate Construction283
App. BA Guide to Common Real Estate Environmental Hazards309
Practice Test319
Answer Key331
Glossary339
Index359

Personal Financial Literacy or Production of Culture Cultures of Production

Personal Financial Literacy

Author: Joan S Ryan

Learn how to plan and manage your personal finances, achieve a financially successful life, and take responsibility as a citizen. PERSONAL FINANCIAL LITERACY is aligned with the Jump$tart Coalition's National Standards for Personal Financial Literacy. The personal focus of this course makes it relevant and meaningful to all; in particular, to those just starting down the path to personal financial independence.



See also: Head First JavaScript or HTML and XHTML Pocket Reference

Production of Culture/Cultures of Production

Author: Paul Du Gay

Examining cultural goods and services, the cultural industries, and the cultural aspects of organization and work, this innovative text offers a novel understanding of relations between the economic and the cultural. This book shows how cultural products are produced, marketed, and sold in an increasingly global economy. Chapters examine the emergence of truly global cultural products and the strategies of global cultural players, such as Sony. They analyze how culture is circulated through the activities of the cultural intermediaries of design, marketing, and advertising, and explore cultural production in practice through an examination of the contemporary fashion industry. The book also looks at why culture has become a crucial concern in business and organizations, and how the construction of particular corporate cultures has implications for the creation of identities that blur the boundaries between work and leisure. Throughout, the book illustrates that contemporary cultural goods and services are inextricably bound upb with economic processes of production, circulation, and exchange, and shows how "economic" processes and practices are in an important sense "cultural" phenomena depending on meaning for their effects. With unique coverage of a range of hotly debated topics, presented in an accessible form with questions, activities, and selected readings, this book will be essential reading for lecturers and students in cultural studies and a range of related fields.



Table of Contents:
What in the World's Going On? - Kevin Robins The Production of Culture - Keith Negus Fashion - Peter Braham
Unpacking a Cultural Production Circulating Culture - Sean Nixon Culturing Production - Graeme Salaman Organizing Identity - Paul du Gay
Making Up People at Work

The Airline Business or Capital and Collusion

The Airline Business

Author: Rigas Doganis

The Airline Industry is currently faced with its longest and deepest crisis to date: many of them are losing hundred of millions of US dollars, several have collapsed entirely, whilst others have had to be rescued by their governments. This crisis has been precipitated by external shocks such as the attack on the Twin Towers in New York, the invasion of Iraq and the SARs epidemic. However, in addition to this, the effect of these events has been exacerbated by dynamic and potentially destabilising internal developments.

This book provides a comprehensive analysis of the crucial events and key developments which have shaped, and will continue to impact on the dynamics of, the airline industry. Special attention is paid to the key challenges faced by the airlines such as continued liberalisation and 'open skies', the impacts of global alliances, new low-cost and no-frills carriers, on-line selling and distribution, privatization and the impact of disasters. Rigas Doganis examines the future prospects for the industry and assesses alternative policies which could help the sector adapt to the changing market place.



Interesting book: Principles of Macroeconomics or Marketing Management for NonProfit Organizations

Capital and Collusion: The Political Logic of Global Economic Development

Author: Hilton L Root

Why does capital formation often fail to occur in developing countries? Capital and Collusion explores the political incentives that either foster growth or steal nations' growth prospects.

Hilton Root examines the frontier between risk and uncertainty, analyzing the forces driving development in both developed and undeveloped regions. In the former, he argues, institutions reduce everyday economic risks to levels low enough to make people receptive to opportunities for profit, stimulating developments in technology and science. Not so in developing countries. There, institutions that specialize in sharing risk are scarce. Money hides under mattresses and in teapots, creating a gap between a poor nation's savings and its investment. As a consequence, the developing world faces a growing disconnect between the value of its resources and the availability of finance.

What are the remedies for eliminating this disparity? Root shows us how to close the growing wealth gap among nations by building institutions that convert uncertainty into risk. Comparing China to India, Latin America to East Asia, and contemporary to historical cases, he offers lessons that can help the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund to tackle the political incentives that are the source of poor governance in developing nations.



Table of Contents:
Ch. 1Risk, uncertainty, and social progress3
Ch. 2Social foundations of policy credibility17
Ch. 3Politics and economic structure : the economic logic of autocracy35
Ch. 4An amazing economy of information : the financial system48
Ch. 5Closing the social productivity gap in East Asia59
Ch. 6The price of exclusion : Latin America's explosive debt89
Ch. 7Why not India? : new century, new country114
Ch. 8Pakistan on the edge157
Ch. 9China's capitalist dream : between hierarchy and market187
Ch. 10Mobilizing the state as public risk manager221
Conclusion : uncertainty, competition, and collusion in early capital accumulation246

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Corporate Financial Reporting or Digital Communications

Corporate Financial Reporting

Author: II Brownle

CORPORATE FINANCIAL REPORTING is written for students who require an understanding of financial accounting and reporting issues, problems, and practices. It is appropriate for the second financial accounting course at the MBA level, often called Corporate Financial Reporting. This text is also appropriate for schools that offer a one semester Intermediate accounting course, at the undergraduate level, for Finance majors. Careful consideration is given to the management aspects associated with various financial reporting issues. Chapters blend issues, concepts, standards and stakeholder interests to convey the complexities, controversies and uncertainties inherent in the financial reporting process.



Go to: White King and Red Queen or Blooding at Great Meadows

Digital Communications

Author: John Proakis

Digital Communications is a classic book in the area that is designed to be used as a senior or graduate level text. The text is flexible and can easily be used in a one semester course or there is enough depth to cover two semesters. Its comprehensive nature makes it a great book for students to keep refer to in their professional careers.

This best-selling book in Digital Communications by John G. Proakis has been revised to reflect the current trends in the field. Some of the topics that have been added include Turbocodes, Antenna Arrays, Iterative Detection, and Digital Cellular Systems. Also new to this edition are electronic figures for presentation materials found on the website.

Booknews

This textbook for a first-year graduate-level course in an electrical engineering curriculum presents the basic principles that underlie the analysis and design of digital communication systems. The fourth edition adds several new topics, including serial and parallel concatenated codes, punctured convolutional codes, turbo TCM and turbo equalization, and spatial multiplexing. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)



Table of Contents:
Preface
1Introduction1
2Probability and Stochastic Processes17
3Source Coding82
4Characterization of Communication Signals and Systems152
5Optimum Receivers for the Additive White Gaussian Noise Channel233
6Carrier and Symbol Synchronization333
7Channel Capacity and Coding374
8Block and Convolutional Channel Codes413
9Signal Design for Band-Limited Channels534
10Communication through Band-Limited Linear Filter Channels583
11Adaptive Equalization636
12Multichannel and Multicarrier Systems680
13Spread Spectrum Signals for Digital Communications695
14Digital Communication through Fading Multipath Channels758
15Multiuser Communications840
Appendix A: The Levinson-Durbin Algorithm879
Appendix B: Error Probability for Multichannel Binary Signals882
Appendix C: Error Probabilities for Adaptive Reception of M-phase Signals887
Appendix D: Square-Root Factorization897
References and Bibliography899
Index917

Geography of Travel Tourism 4E or Russias Virtual Economy

Geography of Travel & Tourism, 4E

Author: Lloyd E Hudman

The travel professional who is interested not only in the physical geography of regions, but also understand the character and features of a destination will find this updated reference a useful addition to their professional library. In addition to a basic geographic overview of the world and each major geographic region, providing insights about the geographic character of specific regions to show how it establishes a setting for tourism. All regions or countries have a brief overview of the cultural, physical, and tourism characteristics of the region or country. The cultural characteristics are in the form of cultural capsules pertaining to the people and some tips as to personal actions that are acceptable and others to be avoided. Following the analysis of the geographic character the text discusses the tourist attractions in each of the regions, focusing on the geographic features that are important for creating a desire to visit that region. The authors highlight the most significant attractions, which combine with the geographic facts of the region to form the uniqueness of the area for visitors. In some cases there are differences of opinions concerning which are the major attractions, but those presented in the text provide an overview of the character of each specific tourist destination region. Tourists themselves also create geography. An area with few tourists is different in character from an area with large numbers of visitors. The origin of tourists also affects the environment; as for example visitors from Great Britain create a different environment than those from France because of their differing expectations and resultant services.

Booknews

This textbook relates the geographic character of specific regions and countries to their use as settings for tourism. For each region, the book provides an overview of the cultural, physical, and tourism characteristics, with details concerning particular attractions. Graphs and maps highlight major tourism destinations and outline decade patterns and markets. Hudman and Jackson have each taught geography at Brigham Young University. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)



Table of Contents:

Chapter 1: Geography and Tourism; The Attraction of Place.

Chapter 2: Patterns and Processes of World Tourism.

Chapter 3: Geography and Tourism in North America.

Chapter 4: Geography and Tourism in Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean.

Chapter 5: Geography and Tourism in South America.

Chapter 6: Geography and Tourism in Western Europe.

Chapter 7: Geography and Tourism in Northern Europe.

Chapter 8: Geography and Tourism in Southern Europe.

Chapter 9: Geography and Tourism in Central Europe and the Balkan States.

Chapter 10: Geography and Tourism in Russia and the Countries of the Former Soviet Union.

Chapter 11: Geography and Tourism in the Middle East and North Africa.

Chapter 12: Geography and Tourism in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Chapter 13: Geography and Tourism in East Asia.

Chapter 14: Geography and Tourism in South and Southeast Asia.

Chapter 15: Geography and Tourism in Australia, New Zealand, and the Islands of the South Pacific.

Look this: Food in the Movies or Best of Bloodroot

Russia's Virtual Economy

Author: Clifford G G Gaddy

Economic reform in Russia has been anything but the smooth process envisioned by many in 1991. A full decade after Russia officially embarked on what were described as "radical market reforms," there is no consensus about whether the economic transition has been a success or failure.

The Russian transition has turned out to be vastly more complicated in practice than in theory. Some attribute the problems to a series of bad policy choices. Others assert that the path to market economics is inconsistent with Russian history and culture.

Neither of these explanations is sufficient to capture the difficulties of implementing a market economy within an economic structure bequeathed by central planning, according to Clifford G. Gaddy and Barry W. Ickes. In this book they examine how the Russian economy has evolved into a mutant form that combines elements of the market with institutions and behaviors that have a distinct, nonmarket character.

Gaddy and Ickes put special focus on Russia's "virtual economy." Rooted in Russia's vast sector of hopelessly noncompetitive industrial enterprises and their struggle to survive in the hostile market environment, this mutant system is characterized by a set of informal institutions that permits the production and exchange of goods that are worth less than the value of the inputs used to produce them. Buyers and sellers collude to hide the fictitious nature of the pricing through the use of barter and other forms of nonmonetary exchange. Those who try to play by the normal market rules are penalized relative to those who play by the virtual economy's rules.

By developing a method by which Russia's virtual economy can be analyzed, Gaddy and Ickes seek to restore a sense of logic and consistency to our understanding of the Russian economy and to provide a framework for thinking about its future.



Team Dynamics or Communicating in Groups and Teams

Team Dynamics

Author: Debbie Housel

In today's high impact world of business, it helps to have someone on your team. Effective teams make for effective businesses, and effective businesses mean success for everyone involved. In every career field it is essential that you develop into a positive team player. The qualities of a progressive team can and will vault you to the top of the success ladder. Team Dynamics will not only review the qualities of an effective team player, but illustrate the types of habits that will make each team you are a part of highly productive and efficient.
Team Dynamics is one title in the Professional Development Series by South-Western. This series is the perfect resource for learning the non-technical strategies and tactics needed to compete in today's business world.



Table of Contents:
Pre-Assessment Activity
Part 1: Working in a Team
Part 2: Essential elements of a Team
Part 3: Team Development
Part 4: Being a Good Team Player
Part 5: Barriers to Successful Teamwork
Part 6: Habits of Effective Teams
Part 7: Effective Team Meetings
Part 8: Leading the Team Endnotes Online Resources Case Studies. Post-Assessment Activity

New interesting book: The Measure of Her Powers or Simply Elegant Soup

Communicating in Groups and Teams: Sharing Leadership (with InfoTrac?)

Author: Gay Lumsden

Emphasizing teamwork, leadership and technology, this book distinguishes itself in two major ways: its emphasis on teamwork and leadership skills and its integration of ethics and diversity throughout. This book is especially timely because of the recent attention given to teams in business and industry, the examination of technology's role in small group communication, and the growing awareness that professionals need to examine their own leadership competence and understand the ethical and social implications of the groups in which they participate.



Monday, December 29, 2008

The Emergence of Private Authority in Global Governance or Economics of the Trade Union

The Emergence of Private Authority in Global Governance

Author: Rodney Bruce Hall

The emergence of private authority is now a feature of the post-Cold War world. The contributors to this volume examine the implications of the erosion of the state's power in global governance. They analyze financial institutions, multinational corporations, religious terrorists and organized crime operations. Relating directly to debates concerning globalization and the role of international law, this study is of interest to scholars and students of international relations, politics, sociology and law.

Foreign Affairs

States have historically been the dominant source of authority in international relations thanks to monopoly on the legitimate use of force. As this evocative book points out, however, authority has begun to take root in nonstate societal and transnational spheres — particularly in the global economy, where private transnational regimes have been devised by banks and firms to regulate transactions. Centuries-old traditions of self-regulatory merchant law have grown into a highly institutionalized semiprivate commercial legal order in which states participate only indirectly to provide enforcement. Other chapters explore the moral authority of transnational religious movements and nongovernmental organizations, and the final chapters examine the authority exercised today by influential nontraditional private actors such as mafias and mercenary armies. Relations between authorities are multifaceted and difficult to pin down — and, indeed, the privatization of specific jobs is now often promoted or welcomed by the state. Nonetheless, the authors succeed in illuminating the many dimensions and shifting terrain of state and nonstate authority, even if the extent and consequences of private governance remain ambiguous.



Table of Contents:
List of figures
List of tables
List of contributors
Preface and acknowledgements
Pt. IIntroduction: theorizing private authority
1The emergence of private authority in the international system3
2Private international regimes and interfirm cooperation23
Pt. IIMarket authority: globalization and "globaloney"
3Economic governance in an electronically networked global economy43
4Global finance, political authority, and the problem of legitimation76
5The state and globalization91
Pt. IIIMoral authority: global civil society and transnational religious movements
6"Regulation for the rest of us?" Global civil society and the privatization of transnational regulation115
7The global dimensions of religious terrorism141
Pt. IVIllicit authority: mafias and mercenaries
8Transnational organized crime and the state161
9The return of the dogs of war? The privatization of security in Africa183
Pt. VConclusions and directions
10Private authority as global governance203
Bibliography223
Index241

Read also Steal This Book or My Guantanamo Diary

Economics of the Trade Union

Author: Alison L Booth

This book analyzes the crucial features of unionized labor markets in industrialized countries, with particular emphasis on Britain and the United States. The techniques used by economists to model unionized labor markets are carefully explained. The connection between theoretical modeling and empirical testing of the theories is also emphasized. The book is directed to undergraduate economics students studying labor economics and to masters students in economics or industrial relations, but it is also accessible to general readers with a quantitative background.



Wounding the West or The Ethical Consumer

Wounding the West: Montana, Mining and the Environment

Author: David M M Stiller

Federal policy toward hardrock mining remains largely unchanged since the passage of the General Mining Law of 1872. That legislation was originally intended to promote settlement and economic development of the American West. A century and a quarter later, the region no longer requires congressional coddling, yet more than half a million mines and mill sites remain abandoned throughout the western states. These sites have created 180,000 acres of polluted lakes and reservoirs and 12,000 miles of contaminated streams and rivers. Montana’s Blackfoot River, made famous by Norman Maclean’s A River Runs through It, is one such battered body of water. Not only did the 1872 law essentially give the land and minerals to miners and mining companies—and it continues to do so today—the law also required no mine reclamation or water quality protection. State mining laws likewise required little or no reclamation.

Wounding the West traces the role of hardrock mining and its relationship with the American West by following the environmental history of one Montana mine, the Mike Horse, from its 1898 discovery, through its heyday in the 1940s, subsequent abandonment, and eventual cleanup under the coercion of a state law that many would consider ill-suited for abandoned mines. David Stiller argues that taxpayers should treat mining companies like the for-profit enterprises they are and insist that the hardrock mining industry pay a fair royalty for extracted minerals and then put this funding to work correcting the industry’s worst historical abuses.

Booknews

An environmental history of the Mike Horse hardrock mine from its 1898 discovery, through its heyday in the 1940s, subsequent abandonment, and its eventual cleanup. The mine is presented as the epitome of the unchecked abuses of the mining industry in the United States and an argument for the urgent reform, if not outright repeal, of the General Mining Law of 1872, which allows for such abuses. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)



Read also Food Fight or Saving Dinner Basics

The Ethical Consumer

Author: Rob Harrison

'This book is not simply the best book on the remarkable phenomenon of today's ethical consumer. It is a gift of advice and insight, from the people that know best, to the cause of tomorrow. Many of the writers deserve the plaudits of being pioneers of a new consumer movement. These are the issues of our time' - Ed Mayo, Chief Executive of the UK's National Consumer Council (NCC)

Who are ethical consumers and why are they on the rise? Leading the way towards answering this question, The Ethical Consumer is an indispensable introduction to the subject. Exploring areas like boycotts and fair trade projects, it gathers together the diverse experiences of scholars, campaigners and business practitioners from the international community.

The chapters in this book explore:

- ethical consumer behaviours, motivation and narratives

- the social, political and theoretical contexts in which ethical consumers operate

- the responsibilities of businesses and the effectiveness of ethical consumer actions

Contributions are informed by a broad range of research methods, from case studies, focus groups to surveys and interviews.

The text is of interest to business related graduates, undergraduates and their tutors on courses relating to consumption. It will also be relevant to academics in other disciplines, as well as to politicians, producers, practitioners, campaigners and not least consumers.



Table of Contents:
Foreword
Introduction1
Defining the ethical consumer1
1Philosophy and ethical consumption11
2The consumer as economic voter25
3A brief history of consumer activism39
4Pressure groups, campaigns and consumers55
5Informing ethical consumers69
6The effectiveness of ethical consumer behaviour89
7Case studying ethical consumers' projects and strategies107
8Using existential-phenomenological interviewing to explore meanings of consumption125
9Modelling consumer decision making in fair trade137
10Identifying and profiling apparel label users155
11Focus groups on consumers' ethical beliefs173
12Surveying ethical and environmental attitudes189
13Corporate disclosure and auditing207
14Meeting the ethical gaze : challenges for orienting to the ethical market219

First Time Leaders of Small Groups or Essentials of Economics Study Guide

First-Time Leaders of Small Groups: How to Create High Performing Committees, Task Forces, Clubs and Boards

Author: Manuel London

First-Time Leaders of Small Groups offers novice and experienced leaders the information they need to keep their members interested and involved, resolve conflicts and deal with difficult people, and ultimately have their group achieve results . . . quickly. The book includes four steps for preparing to lead (selecting members, setting the groundwork for high performance, planning, and establishing your leadership style) and four steps for taking the lead (starting right, working smart, coaching, and assessing). These steps will help you take the lead with confidence. First-Time Leaders of Small Groups is filled with illustrative examples of a wide range of small groups and provides clear suggestions for action. The book includes:



• Questions and answers based on research on what works well, and what does not

• Diagnostics for determining your group’s strengths and weaknesses

• Leadership challenges—ideas for overcoming common difficulties

• Self-assessments to help build confidence as a group leader

• Examples of approaches for different group situations

• Models for understanding how groups work

• Activities for improving group functions

• Key research findings

• Easy-to-follow suggestions for practice



Books about: The Heart Speaks or Ellie Hermans Pilates Props Workbook

Essentials of Economics Study Guide

Author: Rosemary Cunningham

This Study Guide is designed for use with Essentials of Economics by Paul Krugman, Robin Wells, and Martha Olney. It is intended to help you evaluate your understanding of the material covered in the textbook and thereby reinforce the key concepts you need to learn.



Sunday, December 28, 2008

The Handbook of Fraud Deterrence or Purchasing Population Health

The Handbook of Fraud Deterrence

Author: Harry Cendrowski

The Handbook of Fraud Deterrence  encompasses the applicable professional standards and common applications for forensic accounting, fraud deterrence, and fraud investigation services. It is the first book that explains fraud deterrence through internal control improvement within the structure of forensic accounting procedures.



Table of Contents:
List of Exhibits     xxi
Preface     xxiii
Acknowledgments     xxv
Professional Environment of Fraud Deterrence     1
Fraud Deterrence as a Business Management Tool     3
Introduction     3
Motivations for Process Improvement and Monitoring     3
How the Mighty Have Fallen     5
Importance of Internal Controls in Dynamic External Environments     6
Environmental Change and Its Effect on the Fraud Triangle     7
Where Is Bedrock for Fraud Deterrence?     9
Conclusion     11
Definition of Fraud Deterrence     13
Overview     13
Deterrence Activities Will Affect Control Culture     14
History of Fraud Deterrence     15
Introduction     15
Early Fraud Deterrence     15
Modern Fraud Deterrence     16
The Role of Professional Standards     29
Introduction     29
PCAOB Standards     29
American Institute of Certified Public Accountants Auditing Standards     31
American Institute of Certified Public Accountants Accounting and Review Standards     38
Institute of Internal Auditors Standards     38
Associationof Certified Fraud Examiners Standards     39
Certified Fraud Deterrence Analyst-National Association of Certified Valuation Analysts     40
The Fraud Triangle     41
Overview     41
Elements     41
The Fraud Triangle and Financial Reporting Fraud     45
Motivations of Fraud Deterrence and the Transition to Investigation     47
Introduction     47
Motivations for Deterrence Analysis     48
Transition to Investigation     50
Conclusion     55
A Fraud Deterrence Professional's Overview of the Legal Process     57
Introduction and Objectives     57
Basics of Opinion Testimony and the Role of the Judiciary     57
Expert Qualification Standards: When Is a Witness an "Expert"?     59
Admissibility versus Weight: When Is an Expert's Opinion and/or Testimony Admissible?     60
Limitations on the Scope of Expert Opinion Testimony     63
Reports and Discovery Obligations     64
Conclusion     65
Human Resources Concerns     69
Retaliation: The Newest Wave of Employment Litigation     69
An Ounce of Prevention: Background Checks and Employment Inquiries Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act     79
Checklist for Complying with the FCRA When Using a Third Party to Obtain "Consumer Reports"     83
Conclusion     84
Selected Federal Whistleblower Statutes     85
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission     86
Disclosure to Applicant Regarding Consumer Reports     103
Disclosure to Employee Regarding Consumer Reports     104
Sample Notice of Intent to Obtain an Investigative Consumer Report     105
Fair Credit Reporting Act     106
Sample Disclosure of Nature and Scope of Investigative Consumer Report     109
Sample Pre-Adverse Action Notice     110
Sample Adverse Action Notice     111
Applicant     112
Current Employee     113
Tools of Fraud Deterrence     117
Internal Control and Fraud Deterrence: The COSO Integrated Framework     119
Background     119
Control Environment     122
Information and Communication     126
Risk Assessment     128
Control Procedures     131
Monitoring     137
Recent Corporate Governance Reforms Enacted to Deter Financial Fraud: The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and Related Rules and Regulations     143
Introduction     143
Board of Directors     148
Audit Committee     149
Management     152
Internal Auditors     153
Enforcement     154
Protections for Directors and Officers     154
Conclusion     155
Generation-X Technologies and Information Assurance     161
Overview     161
Do We Need a Paradigm Shift in Systems Assurance and Auditing?     161
Generation X Enterprise Technologies: State of the Art     162
Information Systems Integration: A Challenge     163
Assured Information Emanates from Assured Systems     166
Information Assurance: A Function of Strategic Importance     166
Various Information Assurance and Control Measures     170
British Standards: BS7799 and BS 7799-2:2002     173
System Security Engineering Capability Maturity Model: SSE-CMM     174
Conclusion     174
The Impact of Communications Infrastructure on Fraud Detection and Deterrence     177
Introduction     177
Fraud and Technology     177
Communication Security Solutions     178
Correlation     187
Process and Information Validation     189
Interview and Interrogation Process      189
Difference between Interview and Interrogation     190
Preparation and Room Setting     190
Interviewer/Interrogator Demeanor     193
Detecting Deception     195
Conducting the Interview     199
Interrogation     208
Structured Approach to the Interview and Interrogation of a Suspect in a Fraud Investigation     212
Conclusion     215
Forensic Document and Handwriting Examination     216
What Is a "Document"?     216
Forgery     217
Red Flags of Document Examination     218
Caution     219
Red Flags of Handwriting Identification     220
Suggested Reading     221
Data Analysis and Monitoring: How Effective Data Analysis Can Identify Fraud Risk Indicators and Promote Business Intelligence     223
Introduction     223
Data Basics     225
Information Systems     237
Generating Business Intelligence     244
What to Look for in Data Analysis Technology     247
Putting It All Together     248
Reporting     249
Introduction     249
Function of Fraud Deterrence Reports     249
Reporting on Internal Control     251
Reporting in an Investigation     254
Importance of Documentation     258
Conclusion     259
Applications of Fraud Deterrence     261
Deterring Fraudulent Financial Reporting and Asset Misappropriation     263
Introduction     263
Organizational (Corporate) Culture     264
Organizational (Corporate) Governance     266
Internal Controls for Deterrence     268
Deterrence Monitoring     268
Fraud and the Bankruptcy Code     271
Introduction     271
Bankruptcy Refuge for Fraudulent Actors     272
Bankruptcy Fraud     285
Fraudulent Transfer Statutes     296
Intentionally Fraudulent Transfers     302
Constructively Fraudulent Transfers     303
Application of Fraudulent Transfer Laws     306
Remedies for the Recovery of Fraudulent Transfers     311
Corporate Actors/Individual Liability     313
Conclusion     317
Uniform Fraudulent Conveyance Act and Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act     318
Uniform Fraudulent Conveyance Act     320
Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act     322
18 U.S.C. [Section Section] 152-157     328
11 U.S.C. [Section] 548. Fraudulent Transfers and Obligations     330
11 U.S.C. [Section] 522 Exemptions     333
11 U.S.C. [Section] 101(31). Definitions     336
Discovering and Preventing Fraud in Business Formation and Dissolution     351
Introduction     351
Fundamental Assessments     351
Factors Affecting Whether the Fraud Will Succeed     353
Informational Rights and Fraud     353
Approval Rights and Governance     354
Additional Drafting Solutions     355
Minimizing the Occurrence of Fraud     355
Discovery of Fraud     356
Remedies     356
Identity Theft and Privacy Protection     359
Introduction     359
Definition     360
Development of an Epidemic     361
The Outbreak and Law Enforcement     366
Protecting Personal Information     369
Detect Unauthorized Use     373
Defend and Regain Your Identity     374
Bulk Data Breaches     375
The Online Frontier of Phishing and Spoofing     378
Impact on Fraud Deterrence     380
Intellectual Property      383
Introduction     383
How to Tell When Your Company Has Intellectual Property     387
Basic Reasons for Protecting     389
Routine Protection     390
Policing Intellectual Property Rights     394
Possible Recoveries through Litigation     396
Conclusion     397
Fraud Deterrence in the U.S. Private Equity Finance System     399
Introduction     399
U.S. Private Equity System and Its Governance Structure     399
Foundations of a Fraud Deterrence System in Private Equity     405
Adoption of Internal Control Systems within the U.S. Private Equity System     408
Conclusions and Recommendations     413
Glossary of Terms     415
Index     423

Read also The Principles of Scientific Management or Start up Guide

Purchasing Population Health: Paying for Results

Author: David A Kindig

David Kindig's training as a physician, a health care executive, and his academic work in the field of health policy came together to inspire this innovative approach for extracting a higher quality of care at reasonable cost by establishing clear health outcomes measures as a purchasing standard.

Despite the massive resources it consumes, the American health care system remains under stress. While we are global leaders in technical accomplishments in medicine, the quality of health outcomes we achieve per dollar invested is far from optimal. Neither market nor regulatory reforms have addressed this failure of our system.

In the wake of the failed 1994 federal reform effort the system is changing without legislation through market forces. There is no evidence, however, that these changes are reducing costs, increasing quality, or covering the uninsured.

This book details how Dr. Kindig's plan could work and the stages of implementation. It concludes with an examination of the price of inertia in facing this long-standing problem.

This work will appeal to senior policymakers in the private and public sector, including legislators and staff, officials of corporations, and professional organizations. In addition, faculty and students in schools of medicine, nursing, public health, and business, as well as health services researchers and a sophisticated lay audience will find it interesting.

"...a major contribution to our understanding of the forces driving the health care system and the need to create the incentives for a healthier America in the 21st century." --Philip R. Lee, M.D., former Assistant Secretary for Health, Department of Healthand Human Services

David A. Kindig is Professor of Preventive Medicine, University of Wisconsin- Madison School of Medicine.



Power Tools for Business Writing or Cost Justifying Usability

Power Tools for Business Writing

Author: Julie Levitt

POWER TOOLS FOR BUSINESS WRITING is a results-oriented program that boosts writing skills by 35 percent in just 12 to 15 hours. Focus is on the practical, beginning with "quick starting tools," that include overcoming writer's block, using the clustering technique to generate ideas, maintaining momentum, and hammering out an efficient first draft. The essential basics of grammar and punctuation are covered briefly. In addition, active and passive voice, dummy subjects, and weak verbs are presented. Then techniques are presented for refining the first draft with parallel structure, correct placement of modifiers, and clear pronoun references. Next persuasive writing, effective sentence and paragraph structure, and methods of organizing and delivering information to fit the audience are covered. Guidelines for writing and formatting result-oriented e-mail, memos, and letters are provided along with advice on proofreading. Included are self-testing exercises and review sheets.



Table of Contents:
Preface.
1. Quick Starting Tools.
2. Grammar Foundations.
3. Power Tools for Emphasis and Conciseness.
4. Punctuation Essentials.
5. Power Tools for Balance and Clarity.
6. Custom Tools to Persuade Readers.
7. Framing Tools.
8. Sound Blueprints.
9. Formatting and Fine-Tuning Tools.
10. Professional Finishing Tools. Appendix.

Book about: Business Objects XI or Applied Cryptography

Cost-Justifying Usability: An Update for the Internet Age

Author: Randolph G Bias

HCI professionals will repeat quotes with statistics, learn from case studies, and copy chapters for their managers. Thorough & thoughtful, practical & actionable-- readers will be able to put the ideas to work immediately!
—Ben Shneiderman, University of Maryland

"Cost-Justifying Usability" delivers much more than the promise of its title. Each chapter is worth the price of admission! I found more useful ideas and creative thinking in this book than I've come across in one place in years. Moreover, the collection of articles goes far beyond what the book title might suggest: it not only offers the definitive treatment of determining ROI for usability, but also provides a complete overview of usability considerations for getting you there. From specific calculations to help you with extending the business case, to introducing ethnography into the product development process, Cost Justifying Usability offers a treasure of gems for every user-centered design professional.
—Dominick J. Dellino, Director of User Research and Testing, Washington Mutual


You just know that an improvement of the user interface will reap rewards, but how do you justify the expense and the labor and the time—guarantee a robust ROI!—ahead of time? How do you decide how much of an investment should be funded? And what is the best way to sell usability to others?

In this completely revised and new edition, Randolph G. Bias (University of Texas at Austin, with 25 years' experience as a usability practitioner and manager) and Deborah J. Mayhew (internationally recognized usability consultant and author of two other seminal books including The UsabilitEngineering Lifecycle) tackle these and many other problems. It has been updated to cover cost-justifying usability for Web sites and intranets, for the complex applications we have today, and for a host of products—offering techniques, examples, and cases that are unavailable elsewhere. No matter what type of product you build, whether or not you are a cost-benefit expert or a born salesperson, this book has the tools that will enable you to cost-justify the appropriate usability investment.

•Includes contributions by a host of experts involved in this work, including Aaron Marcus, Janice Rohn, Chauncey Wilson, Nigel Bevan, Dennis Wixon, Clare-Marie Karat, Susan Dray, Charles Mauro, and many others;
•Includes actionable ideas for every phase of the software development process;
•Includes case studies from inside a variety of companies;
•Includes ideas from "the other side of the table," software executives who hold the purse strings, who offer thoughts on which proposals for usability support they've funded, and which ones they've declined.

Randolph G. Bias is an associate professor in the University of Texas at Austin School of Information. With a Ph.D. in cognitive psychology from The University of Texas at Austin, Bias spent two decades in industry as a human factors professional, addressing software usability for AT&T Bell Labs, IBM, and then BMC Software where he founded and managed the usability department.

Dr. Deborah J. Mayhew is owner and principal of Deborah J. Mayhew & Associates, a consulting firm based in Massachusetts, offering courses and consulting on all aspects of Usability Engineering and user interface design. Clients include American Airlines, AT&T, Ford,Harvard Univeristy, and NASA. Dr. Mayhew received her Ph.D. in Experimental Cognitive Psychology from Tufts University. She is the author of Principles and Guidelines in Software User Interface Design (Prentice Hall), a coeditor of Cost-Justifying Usability (Academic Press), and a contributor to Human Factors and Web Development.



Leadership of Public Bureaucracies or Regulating Toxic Substances

Leadership of Public Bureaucracies: The Administrator as Conservator

Author: Larry D Terry

Bureaucracies and their leadership are often viewed as threats to democratic government. In this provocative volume, Larry D. Terry skillfully demonstrates that, contrary to this view, bureaucracies and their leadership--when guided by constitutional principles--help maintain governmental stability. Drawing on the works of Philip Selznick, Carl Friedrich, and others, Terry departs from public administration orthodoxy and offers a normative theory of bureaucratic leadership called "administrative conservatorship." Bureaucratic leaders are depicted as "conservators" of public bureaucracies, vigorously protecting the integrity of the bureaucracy and, when called upon, adapting to change. Replete with illustrative examples, this engaging book will serve as a valuable resource for students and practitioners of public administration, political science, public policy, and administrative theory. "This book will fill a void in many of the current courses in public administration and will provide rich insights on the cutting edge of the debates surrounding responsibility and leadership. It was a pleasure to read intellectually challenging scholarship. I believe both students and practitioners of public administration will enjoy the work of this fine craftsman." --American Political Science Review "Larry Terry defines leadership in public bureaucracies using the effective metaphor of 'conservator." In laying out the fabric of the argument, Professor Terry provides an implicit defense of the positive role of bureaucracy in public life. . . . This book is a qualitative leap forward in the area of leadership studies. Scholarship on leadership has suffered from a lack of serious theoreticalgroundwork. Terry has created a useful foundation from which reasoned, rather than colloquial, argument can be fashioned." --American Political Science Review "This is a bold and courageous study. Challenging the antigovernmental orthodoxy of the day, author Larry D. Terry does not shrink from arguing that 'public bureaucracies are national treasures' and marshalls impressive evidence to support his claim. His intriguing development of the idea of 'the administrator as conservator' will have a profound effect upon the field of public administration." --John A. Rohr, Virginia Tech "Amid widespread dissatisfaction with government performance and arguments for downsizing or eliminating government bureaucracies, Larry D. Terry argues convincingly for strong bureaucratic leaders who act as stewards of the public trust, conserving vital missions of a democratic government and the institutions that bring them to fruition. . . . [This volume] is a fresh take on the age-old problem of reconciling democracy with bureaucracy, particularly in a field long dominated by simplistic models of what bureaucratic behavior is and ought to be. --Choice "The author argues his case well, providing the reader with many illustrative examples." --International Review of Administrative Sciences

Booknews

Terry demonstrates that, far from being threats to democratic government, bureaucracies and their leadership--when guided by constitutional principles--help maintain governmental stability. Drawing on the work of Philip Selznick, Carl Friedrich, and others, Terry offers a normative theory of bureaucratic leadership called "Administrative Conservatorship." Bureaucratic leaders are depicted as "Conservators," protecting the image of the bureaucracy and, when called upon, adapting to change. Paper edition (unseen), $19.95. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)



New interesting textbook: Pizza or Perfect Pickle Book

Regulating Toxic Substances: A Philosophy of Science and the Law

Author: Carl F Cranor

The proliferation of chemical substances in commerce poses scientific and philosophical problems. The scientific challenge is to develop data, methodologies, and techniques for identifying and assessing toxic substances before they cause harm to human beings and the environment. The philosophical problem is how much scientific information we should demand for this task consistent with other social goals we might have. In this book, Cranor utilizes material from ethics, philosophy of law, epidemiology, tort law, regulatory law, and risk assessment, to argue that the scientific evidential standards used in tort law and administrative law to control toxics ought to be evaluated with the purposes of the law in mind. Demanding too much for this purpose will slow the evaluation and lead to an excess of toxic substances left unidentified and unassessed, thus leaving the public at risk. Demanding too little may impose other costs. An appropriate balance between these social concerns must be found. Justice requires we use evidentiary standards more appropriate to the legal institutions in question and resist the temptation to demand the most intensive scientific evaluation of each substance subject to legal action.

"An important contribution to the interdisciplinary review of public policy, primarily in its examination of the assumptions and implications of contemporary risk assessment practices in judicial and regulatory settings."--Ethics

"The author is uniquely qualified to examine these issues....In addition to developing his own view, the author provides a wealth of historical information about how risk has been managed in our society. Highly recommended for bothacademics who study risk and professionals who perform and implement risk analyses."--Choice

"Strong in its analysis of science, law, and philosophy, Cranor compellingly demonstrates that the amount of science required in public decisions about toxic substances is an important philosophical issue. This book should both help clarify the debate about toxic substance and restore ethical reasoning to its central place of importance in public discourse about the hazards of toxic substances."--Environmental Law Forum

"A detailed and absorbing piece of research that demonstrates the immense practical importance of ethical theories."--Times Higher Education Supplement

"An interesting vantage point from which readers are challenged to reflect on many socially important risk management issues. For that reason, his analysis is useful and well worth careful study."--Risk: Health, Safety & Environment



Table of Contents:
Introduction: Assessing Toxic Substances Through a Glass Darkly3
1The Scientific Background12
Predicting Risks from Animal Bioassays13
Background13
Regulatory Science and Policy Choices15
Normative Implications of the Scientific Uncertainties in Risk Assessment25
Problems in the Statistics of Human Epidemiological Studies and Animal Bioassays29
Discovering Risks29
Practical Evidence-Gathering Problems30
Theoretical Difficulties31
Traditional Practices in Interpreting Epidemiological Studies39
An Alternative to Traditional Practices40
Clean Hands Science, Dirty Hands Public Policy40
Professional Ethics42
Public Policy Issues44
2Scientific Evidence in the Tort Law49
Institutional Background49
The Challenge to Present Evidentiary Procedures55
Legal Issues57
Arguments for the Scientific Standards Test60
Arguments Against Competitor Views60
Black's Proposal66
A Common Conceptual Framework for Evaluating Scientific and Legal Burdens of Proof71
An Alternative View78
3Joint Causation, Torts, and Administrative Law in Environmental Health Protections83
Joint Causation and the Tort Law85
Liability Rules for Causation85
Proof of Causation90
Administrative Law91
No Moral or Policy Bars to Regulation when Joint Causation Obtains91
The Case for Regulation of Toxic Substances when Joint Causation Obtains94
Utilitarian Arguments95
Justice Arguments97
Other Considerations for Using Administrative Remedies99
4Scientific Procedures in Regulatory Agencies103
Institutional Background104
Major Laws Regulating Carcinogens104
Premarket Regulatory Statutes104
Postmarket Regulatory Statutes105
Procedural Requirements107
Substantive Statutory Requirements107
Approaches to Risk Assessment in Regulatory Agencies109
A Brief History of Agency Use of Risk Assessment109
Current Agency Risk Assessment Practices113
Two Unacceptable Approaches to Risk Assessment115
The Complete and Accurate Science Approach116
The Science-Intensive Approach116
Shortcomings of Present and Recommended Practices129
An Alternative Approach131
Coping with Scientific Uncertainty131
Mitigating the Demanding Evidentiary Standards of Science135
Expediting Risk Assessment137
Use of Tabulated TD[subscript 50]s for Most Sensitive Sites and Species138
Use of Expedited Linearized Multistage Default Procedures141
The Virtues of Expedited Procedures141
Making Public Policy on Expedited Risk Assessments Through the Agencies and Courts147
5Epistemic and Moral Justification152
Epistemic Justification153
Moral Justification157
Principles Implicit in the Occupational Safety and Health Act160
Philosophical Theories of Distribution163
Utilitarianism163
The Daniels-Rawls Theory of Health Care Protection168
The Attraction of Distributively Sensitive Theories175
Notes179
Appendix A Uncertainties in Carcinogen Risk Assessments221
Appendix B Cancer Potency Estimates of CDHS and EPA222
Appendix C Relative Risk as a Function of Alpha and Beta Values225
Appendix D Statutes Authorizing Regulation of Carcinogens229
Appendix E Derivation of TD[subscript 50] Potency Values230
Bibliography231
Index243

Saturday, December 27, 2008

The Tourist Gaze or Employee Recruitment and Retention Handbook

The Tourist Gaze

Author: John Urry

Praise for the First Edition:

"There is much to be applauded here...this is an engaging and thought provoking book which should be read by those interested in advertising and the changing nature of contemporary culture." - Contemporary Sociology

"The book is written in a very accessible style that would serve as a good point of entry for anyone interested in leisure, tourism, and cultural change in contemporary societies. The scope of Urry's book is breathtaking, one is left with a feeling of coming to terms with the complex set of social relations that are tourism, both in their production and consumption." - Planning Practice and Research

This is a fully revised edition of the groundbreaking study on tourism, which was originally published in 1990. The original chapters have been empirically updated and many new research findings incorporated and evaluated.

This Second Edition deepens our understanding of how the tourist gaze orders and regulates the relationship with the tourist environment, demarcating the "other" and identifying the "out-of-the-ordinary." It elucidates the relationship between tourism and embodiment and elaborates on the connections between mobility as a mark of modern and postmodern experience and the attraction of tourism as a lifestyle choice.

The result is a book that builds on the proven strengths of the First Edition and revitalizes the argument to address the needs of researchers and students in the new century.

 

Booknews

Urry (sociology, Lancaster U.) discusses how and why people, for short periods, leave their normal place of work and residence and consume unnecessary goods and services for pleasure, centering his excursions around the tourist gaze upon landscapes or townscapes that are, for them, out of the ordinary. The gaze, he points out, varies by society, social group, and historical period. The 1990 edition having been reprinted almost years since then, he now updates it with new data and studies and better illustrations, and adds a chapter on globalizing the gaze. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)



Table of Contents:
The Tourist Gaze
Mass Tourism and the Rise and Fall of the Seaside Resort
The Changing Economics of the Tourist Industry
Working under the Tourist Gaze
Cultural Changes and the Restructuring of Tourism
Gazing on History
Seeing and Theming
Globalizing the Gaze

Book review: The Reflexology Atlas or What You Must Know About Vitamins Minerals Herbs and More

Employee Recruitment and Retention Handbook

Author: Diane Arthur

Here is the definitive recruitment and retention guide for the today's employment environment. It reflects the realities of a workplace in which job candidates are scarce, competition for good workers is fierce, and employees are expecting greater incentives to stay.

Because it's the first in-depth resource to blend new strategies with traditional and emerging best practices, this handbook covers everything you need to consider as a recruiter and HR professional.

Despite swings in the economy at large, employers are facing a steady and unprecedented labor shortage. In almost every field, the demand for skilled employees continues to exceed the supply. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics predicts that the situation will only worsen, projecting a shortfall of 10 million workers through 2008. Other experts estimate that the labor/capital inversion may last for 25 years.

As this competitive environment stretches into the future, how can your company be sure that it finds and keeps the best employees now? The solution lies in recognizing how employment needs are changing -- and in anticipating as well as addressing those needs. This comprehensive handbook will position you to do just that. Filled with insights from best-practices employers, it analyzes the shifting employment picture. You'll discover a blend of new and proven methods designed to help you recruit and retain top performers.

HR expert Diane Arthur starts by examining today's diverse workforce in depth. Citing examples from companies ranging from Cisco to Kron Chocolatier, she reveals which incentives and benefits really matter to employees ... how they define loyalty ... and why they may ultimately choose to stay with your company or leave it.

If you've been seeking a compendium of solidly creative HR ideas, you'll find it here. With an eye toward the bottom line, Arthur compares traditional recruitment sources like employee referrals and newspaper ads to innovative efforts such as billboard advertising and company-sponsored events. A key chapter probes the benefits and drawbacks of recruiting online, whether via your company's own Web site or a generalized site.

Of course, attracting good candidates is just the beginning. Now more than ever, you have to be sure they can perform. Arthur provides a refresher course on competency-based interviewing that soundly evaluates a person's likelihood of success in your organization.

Your company must also strive to retain the best talent. This book is filled with ideas for structuring attractive compensation packages and work/life practices that support your business objectives. You'll also learn about unusual but successful perks (private movie screenings, pets at work) and the changing role of training, which helps employees become more invested in your business.

Finally, the author points you toward trends that may ease your long-term recruitment and retention needs. These include such innovations as business/education partnerships, employer consortiums, and the use of autonomous work units.



Globalization and Armed Conflict or Last Good Job in America

Globalization and Armed Conflict

Author: Gerald Schneider

Globalization and Armed Conflict addresses one of the most important and controversial issues of our time: Does global economic integration foster or suppress violent disputes within and among states? Here, cutting-edge research by leading figures in international relations shows that expanding commercial ties between states pacifies some, but not necessarily all, political relationships. The authors demonstrate that the pacific effect of economic integration hinges on democratic structures, the size of the global system, the nature of the trade goods, and a reduced influence of the military on political decisions. In sum, this book demonstrates how important the still fragile capitalist peace is.



Go to: Strategic ERP Extension and Use or Practical Real Estate Law

Last Good Job in America: Work and Education in the New Global Technoculture

Author: Stanley Aronowitz

Aronowitz presents his latest, controversial thinking on how globalization brings these interconnections to broad public attention.



Table of Contents:
Part IAccelerated Lives
1No Time for Democracy? Time, Space, and Social Change3
2The Last Good Job in America29
3The End of Bohemia45
Part IIEducation and Democracy
4Thinking Beyond "School Failure" Freire's Legacy59
5Violence and the Myth of Democracy73
6Higher Education as a Public Good89
7Education for Citizenship: Gramsci's "Common School" Today103
Part IIICulture, Identity, and Democracy
8The Double Bind of Race113
9Race Relations in the Twenty-First Century125
10Between Nationality and Class137
Part IVChanging Theories of the State
11Globalization and the State159
12Capitalism and the State: Marcuse's Legacy177
13Onto-history and Epistemology197
Part VJobs in a Globalized Technoculture
14On Union Democracy209
15Unions as a Public Sphere225
16The New Men of Power: The Lost Legacy of C. Wright Mills239
Notes255
Index261
About the Author275

The Competent Manager or Entrepreneurial Finance

The Competent Manager: A Model for Effective Performance

Author: Richard E Boyatzis

Offers an empirical, "total" system approach that determines which characteristics of managers enable them to be effective in various management jobs. Presents a large-scale, intensive study (2,000 managers holding 41 different jobs in 12 organizations) that provides a context for identifying the special characteristics, as well as assessing and developing managerial talent. Develops a logical, integrated model of managerial competence that explains the relationship of these characteristics to each other, to the functions of the management job, and to the key aspects of the internal organizational environment. Also introduces a model of individual competence.



Book review: Pregnancy Fitness or Organizing Solutions for People With Attention Deficit Disorder

Entrepreneurial Finance: A Casebook

Author: Paul Gompers

Gompers and Sahlman are two of the leading researchers and authorities in this field.



Table of Contents:
SECTION I. INVESTMENT ANALYSIS

Module I.A. SOURCES OF VALUE.

1. Introduction to Entrepreneurial Finance.

2. The Knot.

3. Beta Group.

4. Cachet Technologies.

5. Some Thoughts on Business Plans.

6. NSK Software Technologies Ltd..

MODULE I.B. UNDERSTANDING FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND PRO FORMA MODELS.

7. Tutor Time (A).

8. Fenchel Lampshade Company.

MODULE I.C. PURCHASING FIRMS, BUYOUTS, AND VALUATION.

9. A Note on Valuation in Entrepreneurial Ventures.

10. Digital Everywhere, Inc.

11. The Carlton Polish Company.

12. Record Masters

MODULE I.D. REAL OPTIONS.

13. Capital Projects as Real Options: An Introduction

14 Penelope's Personal Pocket Phones.

15. E-ink: Financing Growth

16. Genset: 1989.

SECTION II. FINANCING THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FIRM:

MODULE II A. VENTURE CAPITAL.

17. A Note on Private Equity Securities.

18. edocs, Inc. (A)

MODULE II.B. ANGEL FINANCING.

19. A Note on Angel Financing.

20. Honest Tea

MODULE III.C. VENTURE LEASING.

21. Note on the Venture Leasing Industry.

22. Efficient market services: August 1993 (A).

MODULE II.D. FRANCHISING.

23. A Note on Franchising.

24. Tutor Time (B).

MODULE II.E. BANKS.

25. Xedia and Silicon Valley Bank (A).

MODULE III.F. LICENSING/STRATEGIC ALLIANCE.

26. A Note on Strategic Alliances.

27. Parenting magazine.

MOCULE II.G. GOVERNMENTS FINANCING

28. A Note on Government Sources of Financing for Small Businesses.

29. TorrentSystems.

SECTION III. HARVESTING :

MODULE III.A. INITIAL PUBLIC OFFERINGS.

30. A Note on the Initial Public Offering Process.

31. Amazon.com--Going Public.

32. Arthrocare.

MODULE III.B. ACQUISITIONS.

33. Nantucket Nectars.

34. HIMs Corp, Inc.

SECTION IV. RENEWAL IN THE ENTREPRENEURIAL FIRM.

35. Dell Ventures.

Glossary.

Index

Friday, December 26, 2008

Financial Derivatives or International Accounting

Financial Derivatives: Pricing, Applications, and Mathematics

Author: Jamil Baz

Combining their corporate and academic experiences, Jamil Baz and George Chacko offer financial analysts a complete, succinct account of the principles of financial derivatives pricing. Readers with a basic knowledge of finance, calculus, probability and statistics will learn about the most powerful tools in applied finance: equity derivatives, interest rate markets, and the mathematics of pricing. Baz and Chacko apply concepts such as volatility and time, and generic pricing to the valuation of conventional and more specialized cases. Other topics include: *Interest rate markets, government and corporate bonds, swaps, caps, and swaptions *Factor models and term structure consistent models *Mathematical allocation decisions such as mean-reverting processes and jump processes *Stochastic calculus and related tools such as Kilmogorov equations, martingales techniques, stocastic control and partial differential equations Meant for financial analysts and graduate students in finance and economics, Financial Derivatives begins with basic economic principles of risk and builds up various pricing and hedging techniques from those principles. Baz and Chacko simplify the mathematical presentation, and balance theory and real analysis, making it a more accessible and practical manual. Jamil Baz holds an M.S. in Management from MIT and a Ph.D. in Business Economics from Harvard University. He is a Managing Director at Deutsche Bank in London. George Chacko has a B.S. from MIT in electrical engineering and a Ph.D. in Business Economics from Harvard University. He is an Associate Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School. Both authors have workedextensively for financial services firms in the private sector. They have published in leading academic journals including the Review of Financial Studies and the Journal of Financial Economics as well as practitioner journals such as the Journal of Fixed Income and the Journal of Applied Corporate Finance.



Books about: Personality at Work or Imperialism

International Accounting

Author: Timothy S Doupnik

Doupnik and Perera's International Accounting takes in the whole realm of international accounting, while paying particular focus on the accounting issues related to international business activities and foreign operations.



Table of Contents:
Ch. 1Introduction to international accounting1
Ch. 2Worldwide accounting diversity26
Ch. 3International harmonization of financial reporting74
Ch. 4International financial reporting standards117
Ch. 5Comparative accounting160
Ch. 6Foreign currency transactions and hedging foreign exchange risk233
Ch. 7Translation of foreign currency financial statements295
Ch. 8Additional financial reporting issues341
Ch. 9Analysis of foreign financial statements385
Ch. 10International taxation443
Ch. 11International transfer pricing488
Ch. 12Strategic accounting issues in multinational corporations521
Ch. 13Comparative international auditing and corporate governance574

Bayesian Econometrics or Cool Down

Bayesian Econometrics

Author: Gary Koop

Researchers in many fields are increasingly finding the Bayesian approach to statistics to be an attractive one. This book introduces the reader to the use of Bayesian methods in the field of econometrics at the advanced undergraduate or graduate level. The book is self-contained and does not require that readers have previous training in econometrics. The focus is on models used by applied economists and the computational techniques necessary to implement Bayesian methods when doing empirical work. Topics covered in the book include the regression model (and variants applicable for use with panel data), time series models, models for qualitative or censored data, nonparametric methods and Bayesian model averaging. The book includes numerous empirical examples and the website associated with it contains data sets and computer programs to help the student develop the computational skills of modern Bayesian econometrics.



Go to:

Cool Down: Getting Further by Going Slower

Author: Steve Prentic

Tap into the power that cool thinking generates—

learn how going slower can actually help you get more done, faster.



Before you check your wireless e-mail for the fourth time this hour, ask yourself, is this truly helping you get further ahead? Or is the pressure to address the immediate actually pushing you backwards?


Cool Down takes a look at our innate and powerful addiction to high-speed activity, and shows how it is robbing us of the ability to think creatively and to connect with others (clients, colleagues, managers, and even family) just when we need to the most.


Cool Down offers a provocative look at the value of slowing down in many aspects of our lives and demonstrates clearly that to get further ahead, faster, people do actually need to cool down. It’s not about doing less; it’s about achieving more by slowing down. Cool Down highlights the harmful effects of speed on productivity and reveals the value of slow in helping us to think clearly and prioritize more effectively.


Cool Down is a fascinating look at the world of work, revealing how and why slow is the next tool of strategic advantage.



• Shows why and how to consciously step away from reactionism, pressure, and overload.

• Reveals the numerous ways in which cooling down will improve your potential and abilities—intellectually, emotionally, and creatively—making you more productive by going slower.

• Contains practical advice that will help you apply cool techniques toreal-world situations: at work, on the road, and at home.

• Explains how to improve communication with your boss, your colleagues, and your family.

• Features lots of examples, practical tips, to-dos, and concepts that are memorable and easy to apply. Each end-of-chapter summary includes “Key Points to Take Away” and assessment questions to help you honestly observe and change your current habits.




A complete approach to managing the pressures of life in a fast-paced world, Cool Down allows you to slow down so you can get ahead—and stay there.



Table of Contents:
Introduction.

Chapter 1: The road to Burnout.

Chapter 2: The Silo Effect.

Chapter 3: Personal Blur.

Chapter 4: What Is the Slow Movement?

Chapter 5: The Power of the Blue Sky.

Chapter 6: Creating a Cooler Workday.

Chapter 7: Becoming a Cooler Person.

Chapter 8: Fear.

Chapter 9: Career Maintenance.

Chapter 10: Transition.

Chapter 11: The Family.

Conclusion.

Index.

About the Author.

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Environmental and Natural Resource Economics or Laws of Corporations

Environmental and Natural Resource Economics

Author: Tom Tietenberg

Environmental and Natural Resource Economics, 8/e  takes a policy-oriented approach, introducing economic theory in the context of debates and empirical work from the field. Students leave the course with a global perspective of both environmental and natural resource economics.

Visions of the Future; Valuing the Environment: Concepts; Valuing the Environment: Methods; Property Rights, Externalities, and Environmental Problems; Dynamic Efficiency and Sustainable Development; The Population Problem; The Allocation of Depletable and Renewable Resources: An Overview; Energy: the Transition From Depletable to Renewable Resources; Recyclable Resources: Minerals, Paper, Bottles, and E-Waste; Replenishable but Depletable Resources: Water; Land; Reproducible Private-Property Resources: Agriculture; Storable, Renewable Resources: Forests; Common-Pool Resources: Fisheries and Other Commercially Valuable Species; Economics of Pollution Control: An Overview; Stationary-Source Local Air Pollution; Regional and Global Air Pollutants: Acid Rain and Atmospheric Modification; Mobile-Source Air Pollution; Water Pollution; Toxic Substances; Environmental Justice; Development, Poverty, and the Environment; The Quest for Sustainable Development; Visions of the Future Revisited.

For all readers interested in environmental and natural resource economics.

Booknews

An introduction to the study of environmental and natural resource economics, designed to be accessible to students who have completed a two-semester introductory course in economics or a one-semester introductory microeconomics course. Treats intertemporal optimization within a discrete-time, mathematical programming framework, relegating mathematics beyond simple algebra to appendices, and includes exercises, answers, and discussion questions. This fourth edition continues the trend toward a more international focus, and adds a chapter on environmental justice. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)



Table of Contents:

1 Visions of the Future 1

2 Valuing the Environment: Concepts 14

3 Valuing the Environment: Methods 34

4 Property Rights, Externalities, and Environmental Problems 65

5 Dynamic Efficiency and Sustainable Development 92

6 The Population Problem 108

7 The Allocation of Depletable and Renewable Resources: An Overview 134

8 Energy: The Transition from Depletable to Renewable Resources 156

9 Recyclable Resources: Minerals, Paper, Bottles, and E-Waste 192

10 Replenishable but Depletable Resources: Water 215

11 Land 243

12 Reproducible Private-Property Resources: Agriculture 267

13 Storable, Renewable Resources: Forests 296

14 Common-Pool Resources: Fisheries and Other Commercially Valuable Species 322

15 Economics of Pollution Control: An Overview 356

16 Stationary-Source Local Air Pollution 390

17 Regional and Global Air Pollutants: Acid Rain and Atmospheric Modification 413

18 Mobile-Source Air Pollution 438

19 Water Pollution 463

20 Toxic Substances 495

21 Environmental Justice 523

22 Development, Poverty, and the Environment 549

23 The Quest for Sustainable Development 577

24 Visions of the Future Revisited 603

Problem Set Answers 615

Glossary 622

Name Index 634

Subject Index 640

Interesting book:

Laws of Corporations: And Other Business Enterprises

Author: Harry G Henn

Selection of Form of Business Enterprise; Nature of Corporateness or Corporate Personality; Selection of Jurisdiction of Incorporation; Pre-incorporation Problems; Incorporation and Admission; Recognition or Disregard of Corporateness; Corporate Financial Structure; Corporate Management Structure; Special Problems of Closely Held Corporations; Special Problems of Publicly Held Corporations; Dividends, Other Current Distributions and Redemptions; Extraordinary Corporate Matters; Corporate Litigation (Including Derivative Actions); Corporate Liquidation, Bankruptcy, and Reorganization.