Discussion: View Thread

Missing information? Necessary Conversation with David Korten: Towards a Theory of Community, Feb. 2, 11 am EST

  • 1.  Missing information? Necessary Conversation with David Korten: Towards a Theory of Community, Feb. 2, 11 am EST

    Posted 02-01-2018 18:13
    Hi
    Does anyone have the link or log-in information for this event tomorrow?
    Thank you!



    Isabel Rimanoczy, Ed.D.

    May today bring you a special and unexpected joy. M.G.Neville 

    New TED! Watch it here

    Legacy Mindset FB and Twitter 
    Fort Lauderdale, FL 33312
    +1 (754) 444 0092
    Member of Core Team Aim2Flourish



    On Sun, Jan 28, 2018 at 10:51 AM, Michael Pirson <pirson@fordham.edu> wrote:

    Dear colleagues,


    We kindly invite you to join our next Necessary Conversation format hosted by Erica Steckler and sponsored by the International Humanistic Management Association with


    David Korten, Ph.D. former HBS professor and thought leader


    on: From a Theory of the Firm to a Theory of the Community 


    When: February 2, 11am EST- 12pm EST


    RSVP here for login information:



    From a Theory of the Firm to a Theory of the Community 

    The Theory of the Firm is the holy grail of business school academicians. It posits that markets act perfectly to maximize the well-being of the society when people act to maximize the personal utility of their individual purchases and firms act to maximize financial returns to their owners.

    Evidence is growing that the social and environmental consequences of applying this theory in the organization of business and society threatens our species survival. This suggests the need for a new theory.

    In this conversation, Michael Pirson and David Korten will lead us in identifying crucial elements of a theory of the community. The discussion will build from insights into the implicit organizing principles of healthy living systems and how life self-organizes in community to create and maintain the conditions essential to its own existence. Pirson and Korten will suggest that as living beings, our well-being depends on the health of the living communities on which our health and well-being in turn depend, not just the profits of the businesses in which we invest.


    David Korten's Bio:


    David Korten Biography:

    Dr. David C. Korten is the co-founder and board chair of YES! Magazine, founder and president of the Living Economies Forum, an associate fellow of the Institute for Policy Studies, and a full member of the Club of Rome. He is best known for his seminal books framing a new economy for the Ecological Civilization to which humanity must now transition.

    Korten worked for more than thirty-five years in preeminent business, academic, and international development institutions before he turned away from the establishment to become a leading critic of what he calls global suicide economy. He now devotes his life to advancing the global transition now underway to a living Earth economy organized around deeply democratic self-governing living communities in which people work in co-productive partnership with the rest of nature to meet the needs of all.

    Trained in psychology, organization theory, business strategy, and economics, he devoted his early career to advancing business education in low-income countries. With his wife, Fran Korten, he set up the College of Business Administration in the Haile Selassie I University in Ethiopia, while completing his doctoral studies at the Stanford Business School. He completed his military service during the Vietnam War as a captain in the US Air Force with duty at the Special Air Warfare School, Air Force headquarters command, the Office of the Secretary of Defense, and the Advanced Research Projects Agency.

    A holder of earned MBA and PhD degrees from the Stanford University Graduate School of Business, he served for five years on the faculty of the Harvard Business School, teaching in its MBA, PhD, and middle management programs and serving as its advisor to the Central American Management Institute in Nicaragua. He then headed a Ford Foundation funded Harvard Institute for International Development project to strengthen the organization and management of the national family planning programs throughout the world and taught a course on family planning management at the Harvard School of Public Health.

    In the late 1970s, he and Fran left US academia and moved to Southeast Asia, where he lived for nearly fifteen years, serving first as a Ford Foundation project specialist and later as Asia regional adviser on development management to the US Agency for International Development.

    In 1988, he left the establishment to work with leading Asian nongovernmental organizations on identifying the root causes of development failure in the region and building the capacity of civil society organizations everywhere to function as strategic catalysts of positive national and global change. He and his colleagues concluded that the root cause of development failure resides in economic models and policies promoted by the United States to advance the consolidation of global corporate rule. In 1990, he founded the People-Centered Development Forum, now the Living Economies Forum, to engage with colleagues from around the world to expose the failures of established economic models and advance alternatives.

    In 1992, he and his wife, Fran Korten, returned to the United States to share with their fellow Americans the lessons of their years abroad. They settled in a New York apartment near Union Square between Madison Avenue and Wall Street, where he wrote When Corporations Rule the World (1995, 2001, 2015)It launched in 1995 and became an international bestseller. In 1994, he participated in the formation of the International Forum on Globalization and was an IFG associate for nearly 10 years.

    In 1998, he and Fran moved to from New York City to Bainbridge Island, where Fran became executive director and publisher of YES! Magazine and David wrote in succession The Post-Corporate World: Life after Capitalism (1999); The Great Turning: From Empire to Earth Community (2006); Agenda for a New Economy: From Phantom Wealth to Real Wealth (2009, 2010), and Change the Story, Change the Future: A Living Economy for a Living Earth (2015)In 2001, he participated in founding the Business Alliance for Local Living Economies and served as a founding board member through 2012. With John Cavanagh, he co-founded and co-chaired the New Economy Working Group (2008 – 2016).

     


    Michael Pirson

    Check out my latest book out by Cambridge University Press:

    Sign up for updates from the International Humanistic Management Association:

    My papers on SSRN | ResearchGate |

    Associate Professor | Area Chair | Director, Center for Humanistic Management
    Fordham University




  • 2.  Missing information? Necessary Conversation with David Korten: Towards a Theory of Community, Feb. 2, 11 am EST

    Posted 02-01-2018 21:34
    Isabel -

    Did the link in the email not work?  That was the link I used to register for the program...

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    Julie Smendzuik-O'Brien, PhD, MPA

    Sustainability Through Organization Development and Change (c)
    Skype: jsmendzuik
    Mobile: +01.651.341.6424


       


    On Thu, Feb 1, 2018 at 5:13 PM, Isabel Rimanoczy <isabel.rimanoczy@legacycoaching.net> wrote:
    Hi
    Does anyone have the link or log-in information for this event tomorrow?
    Thank you!



    Isabel Rimanoczy, Ed.D.

    May today bring you a special and unexpected joy. M.G.Neville 

    New TED! Watch it here

    Legacy Mindset FB and Twitter 
    Fort Lauderdale, FL 33312
    Member of Core Team Aim2Flourish



    On Sun, Jan 28, 2018 at 10:51 AM, Michael Pirson <pirson@fordham.edu> wrote:

    Dear colleagues,


    We kindly invite you to join our next Necessary Conversation format hosted by Erica Steckler and sponsored by the International Humanistic Management Association with


    David Korten, Ph.D. former HBS professor and thought leader


    on: From a Theory of the Firm to a Theory of the Community 


    When: February 2, 11am EST- 12pm EST


    RSVP here for login information:



    From a Theory of the Firm to a Theory of the Community 

    The Theory of the Firm is the holy grail of business school academicians. It posits that markets act perfectly to maximize the well-being of the society when people act to maximize the personal utility of their individual purchases and firms act to maximize financial returns to their owners.

    Evidence is growing that the social and environmental consequences of applying this theory in the organization of business and society threatens our species survival. This suggests the need for a new theory.

    In this conversation, Michael Pirson and David Korten will lead us in identifying crucial elements of a theory of the community. The discussion will build from insights into the implicit organizing principles of healthy living systems and how life self-organizes in community to create and maintain the conditions essential to its own existence. Pirson and Korten will suggest that as living beings, our well-being depends on the health of the living communities on which our health and well-being in turn depend, not just the profits of the businesses in which we invest.


    David Korten's Bio:


    David Korten Biography:

    Dr. David C. Korten is the co-founder and board chair of YES! Magazine, founder and president of the Living Economies Forum, an associate fellow of the Institute for Policy Studies, and a full member of the Club of Rome. He is best known for his seminal books framing a new economy for the Ecological Civilization to which humanity must now transition.

    Korten worked for more than thirty-five years in preeminent business, academic, and international development institutions before he turned away from the establishment to become a leading critic of what he calls global suicide economy. He now devotes his life to advancing the global transition now underway to a living Earth economy organized around deeply democratic self-governing living communities in which people work in co-productive partnership with the rest of nature to meet the needs of all.

    Trained in psychology, organization theory, business strategy, and economics, he devoted his early career to advancing business education in low-income countries. With his wife, Fran Korten, he set up the College of Business Administration in the Haile Selassie I University in Ethiopia, while completing his doctoral studies at the Stanford Business School. He completed his military service during the Vietnam War as a captain in the US Air Force with duty at the Special Air Warfare School, Air Force headquarters command, the Office of the Secretary of Defense, and the Advanced Research Projects Agency.

    A holder of earned MBA and PhD degrees from the Stanford University Graduate School of Business, he served for five years on the faculty of the Harvard Business School, teaching in its MBA, PhD, and middle management programs and serving as its advisor to the Central American Management Institute in Nicaragua. He then headed a Ford Foundation funded Harvard Institute for International Development project to strengthen the organization and management of the national family planning programs throughout the world and taught a course on family planning management at the Harvard School of Public Health.

    In the late 1970s, he and Fran left US academia and moved to Southeast Asia, where he lived for nearly fifteen years, serving first as a Ford Foundation project specialist and later as Asia regional adviser on development management to the US Agency for International Development.

    In 1988, he left the establishment to work with leading Asian nongovernmental organizations on identifying the root causes of development failure in the region and building the capacity of civil society organizations everywhere to function as strategic catalysts of positive national and global change. He and his colleagues concluded that the root cause of development failure resides in economic models and policies promoted by the United States to advance the consolidation of global corporate rule. In 1990, he founded the People-Centered Development Forum, now the Living Economies Forum, to engage with colleagues from around the world to expose the failures of established economic models and advance alternatives.

    In 1992, he and his wife, Fran Korten, returned to the United States to share with their fellow Americans the lessons of their years abroad. They settled in a New York apartment near Union Square between Madison Avenue and Wall Street, where he wrote When Corporations Rule the World (1995, 2001, 2015)It launched in 1995 and became an international bestseller. In 1994, he participated in the formation of the International Forum on Globalization and was an IFG associate for nearly 10 years.

    In 1998, he and Fran moved to from New York City to Bainbridge Island, where Fran became executive director and publisher of YES! Magazine and David wrote in succession The Post-Corporate World: Life after Capitalism (1999); The Great Turning: From Empire to Earth Community (2006); Agenda for a New Economy: From Phantom Wealth to Real Wealth (2009, 2010), and Change the Story, Change the Future: A Living Economy for a Living Earth (2015)In 2001, he participated in founding the Business Alliance for Local Living Economies and served as a founding board member through 2012. With John Cavanagh, he co-founded and co-chaired the New Economy Working Group (2008 – 2016).

     


    Michael Pirson

    Check out my latest book out by Cambridge University Press:

    Sign up for updates from the International Humanistic Management Association:

    My papers on SSRN | ResearchGate |

    Associate Professor | Area Chair | Director, Center for Humanistic Management
    Fordham University





  • 3.  Missing information? Necessary Conversation with David Korten: Towards a Theory of Community, Feb. 2, 11 am EST

    Posted 02-01-2018 23:42

    When I registered, I received an email with a Zoom link.

     

    From: Management, Spirituality & Religion [mailto:MSR@AOMLISTS.AOM.ORG] On Behalf Of Julie Smendzuik-O'Brien
    Sent: Thursday, February 01, 2018 6:34 PM
    To: MSR@AOMLISTS.AOM.ORG
    Subject: Re: Missing information? Necessary Conversation with David Korten: Towards a Theory of Community, Feb. 2, 11 am EST

     

    Isabel -

    Did the link in the email not work?  That was the link I used to register for the program...


    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    Julie Smendzuik-O'Brien, PhD, MPA

     

    Sustainability Through Organization Development and Change (c)

    Skype: jsmendzuik

    Mobile: +01.651.341.6424

     

       

     

     

    On Thu, Feb 1, 2018 at 5:13 PM, Isabel Rimanoczy <isabel.rimanoczy@legacycoaching.net> wrote:

    Hi

    Does anyone have the link or log-in information for this event tomorrow?

    Thank you!

     


     

    Isabel Rimanoczy, Ed.D.

     

    May today bring you a special and unexpected joy. M.G.Neville 

    New TED! Watch it here

    Legacy Mindset FB and Twitter 

    Fort Lauderdale, FL 33312

    Member of Core Team Aim2Flourish

     

     

    On Sun, Jan 28, 2018 at 10:51 AM, Michael Pirson <pirson@fordham.edu> wrote:

    Dear colleagues,

     

    We kindly invite you to join our next Necessary Conversation format hosted by Erica Steckler and sponsored by the International Humanistic Management Association with


    David Korten, Ph.D. former HBS professor and thought leader

     

    on: From a Theory of the Firm to a Theory of the Community 

     

    When: February 2, 11am EST- 12pm EST

     

    RSVP here for login information:

     

     

    From a Theory of the Firm to a Theory of the Community 

    The Theory of the Firm is the holy grail of business school academicians. It posits that markets act perfectly to maximize the well-being of the society when people act to maximize the personal utility of their individual purchases and firms act to maximize financial returns to their owners.

    Evidence is growing that the social and environmental consequences of applying this theory in the organization of business and society threatens our species survival. This suggests the need for a new theory.

    In this conversation, Michael Pirson and David Korten will lead us in identifying crucial elements of a theory of the community. The discussion will build from insights into the implicit organizing principles of healthy living systems and how life self-organizes in community to create and maintain the conditions essential to its own existence. Pirson and Korten will suggest that as living beings, our well-being depends on the health of the living communities on which our health and well-being in turn depend, not just the profits of the businesses in which we invest.

     

    David Korten's Bio:

     

    David Korten Biography:

    Dr. David C. Korten is the co-founder and board chair of YES! Magazine, founder and president of the Living Economies Forum, an associate fellow of the Institute for Policy Studies, and a full member of the Club of Rome. He is best known for his seminal books framing a new economy for the Ecological Civilization to which humanity must now transition.

    Korten worked for more than thirty-five years in preeminent business, academic, and international development institutions before he turned away from the establishment to become a leading critic of what he calls global suicide economy. He now devotes his life to advancing the global transition now underway to a living Earth economy organized around deeply democratic self-governing living communities in which people work in co-productive partnership with the rest of nature to meet the needs of all.

    Trained in psychology, organization theory, business strategy, and economics, he devoted his early career to advancing business education in low-income countries. With his wife, Fran Korten, he set up the College of Business Administration in the Haile Selassie I University in Ethiopia, while completing his doctoral studies at the Stanford Business School. He completed his military service during the Vietnam War as a captain in the US Air Force with duty at the Special Air Warfare School, Air Force headquarters command, the Office of the Secretary of Defense, and the Advanced Research Projects Agency.

    A holder of earned MBA and PhD degrees from the Stanford University Graduate School of Business, he served for five years on the faculty of the Harvard Business School, teaching in its MBA, PhD, and middle management programs and serving as its advisor to the Central American Management Institute in Nicaragua. He then headed a Ford Foundation funded Harvard Institute for International Development project to strengthen the organization and management of the national family planning programs throughout the world and taught a course on family planning management at the Harvard School of Public Health.

    In the late 1970s, he and Fran left US academia and moved to Southeast Asia, where he lived for nearly fifteen years, serving first as a Ford Foundation project specialist and later as Asia regional adviser on development management to the US Agency for International Development.

    In 1988, he left the establishment to work with leading Asian nongovernmental organizations on identifying the root causes of development failure in the region and building the capacity of civil society organizations everywhere to function as strategic catalysts of positive national and global change. He and his colleagues concluded that the root cause of development failure resides in economic models and policies promoted by the United States to advance the consolidation of global corporate rule. In 1990, he founded the People-Centered Development Forum, now the Living Economies Forum, to engage with colleagues from around the world to expose the failures of established economic models and advance alternatives.

    In 1992, he and his wife, Fran Korten, returned to the United States to share with their fellow Americans the lessons of their years abroad. They settled in a New York apartment near Union Square between Madison Avenue and Wall Street, where he wrote When Corporations Rule the World (1995, 2001, 2015)It launched in 1995 and became an international bestseller. In 1994, he participated in the formation of the International Forum on Globalization and was an IFG associate for nearly 10 years.

    In 1998, he and Fran moved to from New York City to Bainbridge Island, where Fran became executive director and publisher of YES! Magazine and David wrote in succession The Post-Corporate World: Life after Capitalism (1999); The Great Turning: From Empire to Earth Community (2006); Agenda for a New Economy: From Phantom Wealth to Real Wealth (2009, 2010), and Change the Story, Change the Future: A Living Economy for a Living Earth (2015)In 2001, he participated in founding the Business Alliance for Local Living Economies and served as a founding board member through 2012. With John Cavanagh, he co-founded and co-chaired the New Economy Working Group (2008 – 2016).

     

    Michael Pirson

    Check out my latest book out by Cambridge University Press:

     

    Sign up for updates from the International Humanistic Management Association:

     

    My papers on SSRN | ResearchGate |

     

    Associate Professor | Area Chair | Director, Center for Humanistic Management

    Fordham University