Sex, Politics, and Religion at the Office.Sex, Politics, & Religion at the Office John F. Boogaert & Douglas E. Noll Auberry Press 2037 W. Bullard Avenue, #427, Fresno CA 93711 0977878406 $18.95 www.auberrypress.com Written by corporate leadership and crisis management expert John F. Boogaert and former business trial lawyer Douglas E. Noll, Sex, Politics, & Religion at the Office: The New Competitive Advantage is a guide for business and corporate managers and officials to move beyond simple legal compliance with national regulations and shape corporate culture with healthy attitudes towards sex, politics, religion, and power. From setting one's "Grounded Positioning Statement" to understanding the reality of the intersection intersection /in·ter·sec·tion/ (-sek´shun) a site at which one structure crosses another. intersection a site at which one structure crosses another. between politics and religion to learning how to be nonjudgmental non·judg·men·tal adj. Refraining from judgment, especially one based on personal ethical standards. Adj. 1. nonjudgmental , noncritical, and noncreative when dealing with thorny thorn·y adj. thorn·i·er, thorn·i·est 1. Full of or covered with thorns. 2. Spiny. 3. Painfully controversial; vexatious: a thorny situation; thorny issues. sexual, religious, or values-based issues, Sex, Politics, & Religion at the Office offers valuable insight into how human beings actually think and work, and how best to be the catalyst to improved coworker co·work·er or co-work·er n. One who works with another; a fellow worker. and worker-management relations. True vignettes pepper this handy, sensible, down-to-earth guide which avoids any kind of moralizing mor·al·ize v. mor·al·ized, mor·al·iz·ing, mor·al·iz·es v.intr. To think about or express moral judgments or reflections. v.tr. 1. To interpret or explain the moral meaning of. and focuses on promoting intellectual and emotional well-being at the office. |
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