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BookNotes

BookNotes is your monthly guide to good, informative reading. Each month BookNotes will feature the Editor's choice of titles. This month our Editor has selected these books on the issues of corporate citizenship and volunteerism.
Do what you love...
Do What You Love, the Money Will Follow: Discovering Your Right Livelihood

Publisher:
Dell (Random House)

Author:
Marsha Sinetar

No More Monday Morning Blues... You're about to be liberated! Here is the book you've been waiting for-a-step-by-step guide to finding the "work" that expresses and fulfills your needs, talents, and passions. Using dozens of real-life examples, Marsha Sinetar shows you how to overcome your fears, take the little risks that make big risks possible, and become a person whose work means self-expression, growth, and love!

Discover how to:

- Tune into your inner world and your unique talents.
- Evaluate and build your self-esteem--the three key questions to ask yourself.
- Banish your outmoded network of "shoulds".
- Deal with the Big R--resistance.
- Liberate yourself from an unfulfilling job...and much more!

Begging for Change

Publisher:
HarperBusiness

Author:
Robert Egger

Begging for change

You are a good person. You are one of the 84 million Americans who volunteer with a charity. You are part of a national donor pool that contributes nearly $200 billion to good causes every year. But you wonder: Why don't your efforts seem to make a difference?

Fifteen years ago, Robert Egger asked himself this same question as he reluctantly climbed aboard a food service truck for a night of volunteering to help serve meals to the homeless. He wondered why there were still people waiting in line for soup in this day and age. Where were the drug counselors, the job trainers, and the support team to help these men and women get off the streets? Why were volunteers buying supplies from grocery stores when restaurants were throwing away unused fresh food every night? Why had politicians, citizens, and local businesses allowed charity to become an end in itself? Why wasn't there an efficient way to solve the problem?


Good Corporate Citizen

The Good Corporate Citizen: A Practical Guide

Publisher:
John Wiley & Sons

Author:
Doris Rubenstein

"Qualitative goals for an environment that sustains capital investment, rewards entrepreneurs, and promotes an educated and loyal workforce need to be set. Business can then determine how to improve the conditions upon which it relies for long-term profitability. Doris Rubenstein has given us a vision of those qualitative goals along with very practical suggestions for enlightened business self-interest."
From the Introduction by Stephen B. Young
Global Executive Director, The Caux Round Table


Harvard Business Review on Corporate Responsibility

Publisher:
Harvard Business School Press


Author:
Harvard Business School

Harvard Business Review
What and whom is a business for? This collection of articles gathers the latest thinking on the strategic significance of corporate social responsibility. Readers will develop an understanding of why businesses should continue to give money away even while laying off workers, how companies play a leadership role in today's social problems by incorporating the best thinking of governments and nonprofit institutions, and how community needs are actually opportunities to develop ideas and demonstrate business technologies. Readers will see how corporate responsibility can lead to new markets and solutions to long-standing business problems.


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