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Todd Suomela

Herminia Ibarra Networking is vital for successful managers - 0 views

  • There are three types of networks important in business: operational, personal and strategic. While a lot of managers excel at building and using their operational network, they often overlook their personal and strategic networks. 
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    Managers today juggle more responsibilities than ever and for many of them networking becomes an afterthought. Herminia Ibarra, INSEAD Professor of Organisational Behaviour says that's a potentially fatal career mistake.
Todd Suomela

History Commons - 0 views

  • The History Commons contains summaries of 10,441 events, which are published on the website in the format of dynamic timelines. These timelines can be filtered by investigative project, topic, or entity (e.g., a person, organization, or corporation). You can even generate a “scalable context” timeline for any event in the History Commons database simply by clicking the date of the timeline entry. You can search for events by using the search box at the top right-hand corner, or by browsing through the list of projects.
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    The History Commons website is an experiment in open-content civic journalism. It provides a space for people to conduct grassroots-level investigations on any issue, providing the public with a useful tool to conduct oversight of government and private sector entities.
Todd Suomela

Commons Law Project - 0 views

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    "If Planet Earth is to survive in the coming decades as we know it, we must find new ways to protect our planet from the unsustainable growth imperatives of neoliberal economics and politics. This will require a new architecture of "green governance"―laws, public policies, and social practices that can honor human rights and commons-based management of natural resources large and small"
Todd Suomela

ICEO | IEEE Committee on Earth Observation - 0 views

  • The IEEE Committee on Earth Observation (ICEO) facilitates broad-based IEEE participation in the Group on Earth Observations (GEO) and its international effort to create a Global Earth Observation System of Systems (GEOSS) for applying Earth observation data and information for societal benefits. The focus of GEO and ICEO is helping to improve living conditions, particularly in developing countries, through the development of GEOSS, a realizable global resource for decision makers at all levels. To support this development, GEOSS requires the broad range of skills embodied in the IEEE membership from System of Systems (SoS) engineering and communication to standards and information applications.
Todd Suomela

Open Humanities Press - 0 views

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    An example of open publishing for the humanities.
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    Open Humanities Press is an international open access publishing collective in critical and cultural theory. Open Humanities Press journals are fully peer reviewed, scholarly publications that have been chosen by OHP's editorial advisory board for their outstanding contribution to contemporary theory. OHP's journals are independent, published under open access licences and free of charge to readers and authors alike.
Todd Suomela

OnTheCommons.org » More than just jobs, we need meaningful work. - 0 views

  • We are today surrounded by an abundance of productivity that the market does not recognize or value. In this consumer society, we think about “work” as what people do to pay for goods and services in the marketplace. If our work doesn’t earn money, it’s not counted as an economic asset. The power of the market is so strong that we often don’t recognize or value work that is essential to society’s future. The unpaid contributions of homemaking, parenting, volunteering, care giving and citizenship are not valued or nor appreciated. Americans (and many others in the modern world) have internalized a limited definition of work defined exclusively as employment in the market economy. As a result, we have discarded the real and potential productivity of young people and retirees—and everyone else who is outside of the paid workforce.
Todd Suomela

Commons Blog - 0 views

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    commons blog from Germany
Todd Suomela

digital digs: from immaterial labor to immaterial profits - 0 views

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    Perhaps what is going on here is a new kind of crisis/tragedy of the commons. Unlike the old commons that gets fished-out or over-grazed, the digital commons appears to be this endless supply of storage and bandwidth. However obviously those things do cost money to someone, and while both have gotten cheaper, in the volume being used by YouTube or Facebook, it adds up quickly.
Todd Suomela

OnTheCommons.org » "The Commons is About 'Commoning'" - 0 views

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    The commons, said Wolcher, citing Linebaugh, is not simply a conflict over property rights. It is about "people expressing a form of life to support their autonomy and subsistence needs." The commons is a verb - "commoning." It's about "taking one's life into one's own hands, and not waiting for crumbs to drop from the King's table."
Todd Suomela

OnTheCommons.org » Sharing the Work, Spreading the Wealth - 0 views

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    essay by Janet Hively To create a commons-based society, people need more than exposure to new ideas. They need tangible ways of practicing and living out these bright possibilities. Old habits about how we organize and pay for work maintain the sharp divisions between rich and poor and tie us to the consumer values of the market-based society. At this time when unemployment due to layoffs is growing, we should try out some new ways to share the work and spread the wealth.
Todd Suomela

OnTheCommons.org » How Shall We Govern the (Online) Commons? - 0 views

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    David Bollier outlines some possible online governing strategies for the commons.
The Ravine / Joseph Dunphy

Sic Semper Tyrannis - Post details: What 'Unemployment' Really Means These Days - 0 views

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    Debunking a much fudged statistic
The Ravine / Joseph Dunphy

Adjunct Faculty, The Burros of Academia by Dr. Burton Fletcher - 0 views

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    Ah, all of this, and you get paid $1200-$1500 / semester, IF your class doesn't get cancelled, and I would know about the salary. I was about to become one of those adjuncts, teaching introductory probability and statistics, when I found that only three students at that college were willing to sign up for that class, listed in the schedule as being taught by the well known Prof.Staff. (He gets around a lot). I still remember walking down the street, wondering what happened, when passing a line of people hoping to get into a class that did seem to be of interest to students - "finding your animal spirit guide". No, I'm not making that up. A little about the "privileged" life that the backbreaking work they did in graduate school made possible, for so many, while the former frat boy executives who drank and cheated their way through school have so often ended up having to struggle by on six figure incomes, as they stare forlornly out their corner office windows. I'm not guessing about the frat boys. I've tutored and graded the papers of a number of these "achievers". A little more truth about life in the so-called land of opportunity, in the Postmodern Era.
Todd Suomela

Open Left:: Moral Politics: What Is A "Public Good"? - 0 views

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    But the distinction between "common" and "public" is not one that most people in most circumstances wish to preserve. Indeed, one of the functions of democratically-grounded government is to seek to functionally eliminate that distinction for its citizenry as much as possible in terms of their day-to-day lives.
The Ravine / Joseph Dunphy

The Death of Horatio Alger - 0 views

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    More blasphemy. This time, evidence of a relative absence of wage mobility in the present day US and the rise of a class hierarchy.
The Ravine / Joseph Dunphy

Op-Ed Columnist - Where Sweatshops Are a Dream - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    Nicholas D. Kristof of the New York times writes in praise of third world sweatshops. I swear I'm not making this up, and he does an excellent job of selling something truly monstrous to those who think that Economics is a science. Found on Furl.
The Ravine / Joseph Dunphy

Op-Ed Columnist - An Economy of Faith and Trust - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    David Brooks, in an op / ed piece to the New York times, discovers that participation in the market does not magically transform human beings into the rational beings that one could easily see that they aren't by ... oh, say, talking to them.
The Ravine / Joseph Dunphy

VDARE.com: 10/10/04 - Economics: Science or Religion? - 0 views

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    A little reality for a chance. Blog post about outsourcing. No, it's not good press.
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