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Co-operatives in a Global Economy: The Challenges of Co-operation Across Borders Editor: Darryl Reed and J. J. McMurtry Date Of Publication: Feb 2009 Isbn13: 978-1-4438-0189-8 Isbn: 1-4438-0189-5 In their efforts to internationalize in the emerging global economy, co-operatives not only face a variety of problems that are common to all firms, but encounter specific challenges due to their particular value commitments, forms of incorporation and organizational structures. These features of cooperatives are generally seen as a major source of competitive disadvantages and may cause significant trade-offs, forcing cooperatives to choose between living up to their principles of member ownership and control and remaining economically viable. Critics argue that such trade-offs signal the increasing irrelevance of cooperatives in a global economy. Advocates, however, counter that cooperatives may have unique competitive advantages which can be exploited in a global economy and that current trade-offs facing cooperatives can be overcome with the development of new international and transnational cooperative institutions and practices. Cooperatives, they claim, represent a much more sustainable and equitable form of production and may form the basis for viable, alternative approaches to development. This collection examines these debates about the roles of cooperatives in our increasingly global economy. Darryl Reed is an Associate Professor in the Business and Society program at York University. His areas of research include business ethics, business and development, fair trade, community economic development, corporate social responsibility and corporate accountability movements. He has published in a range of business and economic ethics journals, including Business Ethics Quarterly, Journal of Business Ethics, Business Ethics: A European Review, and the International Journal of Social Economics. He is co-editor of Corporate Governance, Economic Reforms and Development: The Case of India (2003).
J.J. McMurtry is an Assistant Professor in the Business and Society Program at York University. He is active within the co-operative movement in Ontario, Canada and sits on the board of the Canadian Association for Studies in Co-operation (CASC). His teaching and research focuses on the social, political, and economic roles which the social economy, and specifically co-operatives, play in generating alternative economic theory and practice. He has published in such journals as the Journal of Business Ethics and the International Journal of Social Economics. Price Uk Gbp: 39.99 Price Us Usd: 59.99
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From Kerouac Ascending: Memorabilia of the Decade of On the Road
“Katherine Burkman, best known for her contributions to Harold Pinter, Samuel Beckett, and modern drama studies in general, now provides an essential reference for students of Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, and the beats through this memoir by Elbert Lenrow. A beloved teacher at the New School for Social Research, Lenrow met and taught Jack Kerouac in the late forties, befriending him and Allen Ginsberg as well. The book offers unprecedented insight into the beats in general and Kerouac’s development as a writer, thinker, and cultural force in American literature. Howard Cunnell, who introduces the book, notes that through his friendship with Kerouac, ‘Lenrow got to ride in what would become the most famous car in modern American literature.’ And thanks to this book, now readers of Kerouac Ascending do, too.” —Ann C. Hall, Professor, Ohio Dominican University; President, Harold Pinter Society
“The larger significance of the sustained and sustaining friendship between Elbert Lenrow and Kerouac and Ginsberg in this book is that it exhibits Jack and Allen in ways that are seldom, if ever, represented in accounts of their lives. As a bonus, from this fine, small book, the reader can acquire an enriched and enhanced understanding of the multifarious political, literary, and artistic relationships of virtually all the principal players in the cultural scene in the mid- to late 20th century.” —James L. Battersby, Professor Emeritus of English, Ohio State University
“Always their affectionate elder, Lenrow presents Kerouac and Ginsberg mostly in their own words, making no broad claim or judgments beyond the recognition that both writers spoke for their time as Walt Whitman did for his and that they have become iconic figures for a literary movement. It is a modest but important work presenting original materials saved by a gentle, sensitive, and literate man.” —Mark S. Auburn, Professor Emeritus of English, former Senior Vice President and Provost at the University of Akron
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