PDF-(READ)-Professionalism and Values in Law Practice (Giving Voice to Values)

Author : haywoodireland | Published Date : 2022-06-28

This book presents practical advice to law students and those entering and now working in the legal profession that will help them to reconcile who they are as a

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This book presents practical advice to law students and those entering and now working in the legal profession that will help them to reconcile who they are as a person with the demands and opportunities of a legal careerThe book sets out a clear framework and practice examples for i defining success ii understanding the role of a professional in relation to clients colleagues adversaries and community iii reconciling demands of practice within ethical rules and norms business considerations and personal values and iv building a valuescentered economically viable practice and reputationComplete with practical advice and experiences that produce and reinforce a holistic approach this book provides invaluable support for second and thirdyear law students and lawyers in practice to establish elusive worklife balance over the course of a legal career. Leonard Joy. DSA November 2010. Development and Values. Messages. :. Values develop . in both individuals and society.. Values development should be our development goal. .. Values development has significance for how we practice.. The . challenge of ethical professionalism in times of austerity. Professor Helen Colley. Education and Social Research Institute. Manchester Metropolitan University. Introduction . Outline of the problem. Giving Voice to Values curriculum collection ( www.GivingVoiceToValues.org ). The Aspen Institute was founding partner, along with the Yale School of Management, and incubator for Giving Voice to Signe Groth . Andersson. , Socialt . Udviklingscenter. SUS. , Köpenhamn; . SGA@sus.dk. . Verner Denvall, Linnéuniversitetet, Sverige; . Verner.Denvall@lnu.se. . Vad säger forskning om . performance. Western Sydney Region. • INTEGRITY • EXCELLENCE • RESPECT • RESPONSIBILITY • COOPERATION • PARTICIPATION •. • CARE • FAIRNESS • DEMOCRACY •. Student Voice. Stories about. .. . School-wide Core Values ... . Communities of practice. Communities of practice are groups of people who share a concern or a . passion . for something they do and . learn . how to do . it . better as they . interact regularly.. (. What’s Going on Here?. Exploratory Research Survey. Follows up PDW at AOM 2015: Faith, Formation & Values. Ten Questions -. . designed to explore commonalities. Distributed to MSR Listserv & PDW Participants. Despite four decades of good faith effort to teach ethics in business schools, you\'ll still find today headlines about egregious excess and scandal. It becomes reasonable to ask why these efforts have not been working. Business faculty in ethics courses spend a lot of time teaching theories of ethical reasoning and analyzing those big, thorny dilemmas-triggering what one professor called ethics fatigue. But what if faculty stopped focusing on ethical analysis and focused on a new curriculum-one that builds a conversation across the core curriculum (not only in ethics courses) and also provides the teaching aids for a new way of thinking about ethics education? This is where Giving Voice to Values (GVV) comes in-the GVV curriculum asks the question: What if I were going to act on my values? What would I say and do? How could I be most effective? This book will help faculty across the business curriculum with examples, strategies, and assistance in applying the GVV approach. In addition to an introductory chapter, which explains the rationale and strategy behind GVV, there are twelve individual chapters by faculty from the major business functional areas and from faculty representing different geographic regions. The book is a useful guide for faculty from any business discipline on HOW to use the GVV approach in his or her teaching. Giving Voice to Values, under the leadership of Mary Gentile, has fundamentally changed the way business ethics and values-driven leadership is taught and discussed in academic and corporate settings worldwide.This book shifts attention to the future of Giving Voice to Values (GVV) and provides thought pieces from practitioners and leading experts in business ethics and the professions on the possibilities for sustaining its growth and success. These include the creation of new teaching materials, reaching different audiences, and expanding the ways in which GVV is making a difference in classrooms and the workplace and acting as a catalyst for organizational and societal change. The book closes with a reflective chapter by Mary Gentile, looking back at where GVV has been and looking ahead to where GVV might go. Can employees be trained to make more ethical decisions? If so, how? Providing evidence-based and practical answers to these critical questions is the purpose of this book. To answer these questions, the authors--four organizational psychologists who specialize in the study of ethical decision making--translate insights based on decades of scientific research. Whether you are a student, educator, HR manager, compliance professional, or simply someone interested in the topic of ethics education, this book offers a road map for designing ethics training programs that work. Never before have the pressures of a comparative and competitive world impacted on our sense of wellbeing, particularly among young adults. Building on the principles of Giving Voice to Values, which honors the complexity and difficulty of leading with our values, this book addresses the unique challenges faced by young adults. It provides a clear process that details how to harness natural wisdom to flourish through the relentless pace and pressure of today\'s world. Moving beyond mere values clarification, Authentic Excellence helps the reader develop a deeper relationship with their values and confidently express them, and builds effective coping skills to manage the relentless noise of our comparative and competitive world. Authentic Excellence answers five primary questions:How are young adults affected by this world of relentless change and pressure?Why are young adults vulnerable to a plateau that can negatively affect their resilience?What is the difference between fear-based excellence and authentic excellence and what role do values play in this distinction?What is necessary to move beyond fear-based excellence and why is it so hard?How do you train a deeper level of effectiveness that includes more consistent productivity, fulfillment and resilience? This book takes the central issues facing board members today and applies the giving voice to values framework while also providing insights from practicing board members who have faced these issues. It covers such topics as strategic planning and monitoring, director independence, privacy and cyber risk, executive compensation and CEO succession planning. With this book, readers will also grapple with the conflicts of interest that might arise in the director selection process, role of the nominating committee and the compensation committee in order to cultivate more optimal board dynamics.The principles of giving voice to values start by asking a deceptively simple question: \'What if you were going to act on your values--what would you say and do?\' The book then provides an overview of the current landscape of corporate governance along with the major rules and director duties applicable to the board of directors. The book\'s latter chapters contain a series of five scenarios common to the board of directors that are presented as a set of Board Challenges involving the tensions often found in board work.In Giving Voice to Values in the Boardroom, the author, Cynthia E. Clark, provides practical strategies for board members and other constituents of corporate governance to deal with these challenges. These cases are designed to help users of the book implement prescripting and action planning. Each case will also have discussion questions about the stakes and stakeholders, common reasons and rationalizations and examples of how firms and governance professionals have handled similar board challenges. How can you effectively stand up for your values when pressured by your boss, customers, or shareholders to do the opposite?Babson College business educator and consultant Mary Gentile draws on actual business experiences as well as social science research to challenge the assumptions about business ethics at companies and business schools. She gives business leaders, managers, and students the tools not just to recognize what is right, but also to ensure that the right things happen. The book is inspired by a program Gentile launched at the Aspen Institute with Yale School of Management, and now housed at Babson College, with pilot programs in over one hundred schools and organizations, including INSEAD and MIT Sloan School of Management.She explains why past attempts at preparing business leaders to act ethically too often failed, arguing that the issue isn’t distinguishing what is right or wrong, but knowing how to act on your values despite opposing pressure. Through research-based advice, practical exercises, and scripts for handling a wide range of ethical dilemmas, Gentile empowers business leaders with the skills to voice and act on their values, and align their professional path with their principles. Giving Voice to Values is an engaging, innovative, and useful guide that is essential reading for anyone in business. This is not a book of antiracist theory but antiracist tactics - tactics that anyone, of any race, can use to strike a blow against injustice. Antiracism is not about what we feel but what we do, and there are specific techniques we can use to create a just world.Antiracist strategies are skills that can be learned just as we learn skills for public speaking or hitting a baseball. In these pages, you - whether a person of color or white - will find a playbook for leading your workplace, organization, or community through transformative change in the wake of an act of explicit racism. You\'ll learn to play antiracist rhetorical chess, and to anticipate and effectively respond to the discursive moves of people who don\'t understand bigotry, aren\'t aware of it, are in denial of it, or even actively uphold it - so that you can advance justice goals. You\'ll get a blueprint of how to dismantle systemic racism community by community, workplace by workplace, and organization by organization - and examples of what not to do.This book is aimed at people who are conscious of the reality of racism and want to end it but may not know how. It clearly shows how anyone can make an effective, significant, and measurable impact on racism through strategic action.

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