Daughters of the Declaration: How Women Social Entrepreneurs Built the American Dream
Autor Claire Gaudiani, David Graham Burnetten Limba Engleză Hardback – 8 noi 2011
America's
founding
fathers
established
an
idealistic
framework
for
a
bold
experiment
in
democratic
governance.
The
new
nation
would
be
built
on
the
belief
that
“all
men
are
created
equal,
and
are
endowed...with
a
right
to
life,
liberty,
and
the
pursuit
of
happiness.”
The
challenge
of
turning
these
ideals
into
reality
for
all
citizens
was
taken
up
by
a
set
of
exceptional
American
women.
Distinguished
scholar
and
civic
leader
Claire
Gaudiani
calls
these
women
“social
entrepreneurs,”
arguing
that
they
brought
the
same
drive
and
strategic
intent
to
their
pursuit
of
“the
greater
good”
that
their
male
counterparts
applied
to
building
the
nation's
capital
markets
throughout
the
nineteenth
century.
Gaudiani
tells
the
stories
of
these
patriotic
women,
and
their
creation
of
America's
unique
not-for-profit,
or
“social
profit”
sector.
She
concludes
that
the
idealism
and
optimism
inherent
in
this
work
provided
an
important
asset
to
the
increasing
prosperity
of
the
nation
from
its
founding
to
the
Second
World
War.
Social
entrepreneurs
have
defined
a
system
of
governance
“by
the
people,”
and
they
remain
our
best
hope
for
continued
moral
leadership
in
the
world.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781610390316
ISBN-10: 1610390318
Pagini: 352
Ilustrații: TBD
Dimensiuni: 165 x 241 x 32 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: PublicAffairs
Colecția PublicAffairs
ISBN-10: 1610390318
Pagini: 352
Ilustrații: TBD
Dimensiuni: 165 x 241 x 32 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: PublicAffairs
Colecția PublicAffairs
Notă biografică
Claire
Gaudianiis
an
expert
on
the
history
and
economics
of
American
philanthropy.
From
2004-2009,
she
served
as
clinical
professor
at
the
Heyman
Center
for
Philanthropy
at
New
York
University,
where
she
directed
the
graduate
program
in
philanthropic
studies.
From
2001-2004
at
the
Yale
Law
School,
she
wroteThe
Greater
Good:
How
Philanthropy
Drives
the
American
Economy
and
Can
Save
Capitalism.
Gaudiani
served
for
13
years
as
president
of
Connecticut
College,
where
she
was
also
professor
of
French.
She
is
married
toDavid
Burnett,
PhD,
her
partner
in
Gaudiani
Associates.
Recenzii
Kirkus,August
11
“An interesting sidelight on the transformation of laissez-faire capitalism and the shaping of markets toward more ethical behavior.”
“An interesting sidelight on the transformation of laissez-faire capitalism and the shaping of markets toward more ethical behavior.”
Publishers
Weekly,
September
15,
2011
“The
examples
of
strong
women
who
were
agents
of
change
for
their
fellow
citizens
are
edifying
and
inspirational.”
Booklist
“[Gaudiani
and
Burnett]
have
a
broader
purpose
in
examining
the
work
of
generations
of
American
women
activists…Their
subjects
are,
the
authors
urge,
“social
entrepreneurs”
who
brought
to
the
issues
they
championed
the
same
optimism,
idealism,
and
determination—and
the
same
strategic
planning,
tactical
flexibility,
and
operational
creativity—that
for-profit
entrepreneurs
applied
to
their
fledgling
industries.
In
the
process…these
women
developed
a
vibrant
“social
profit”
sector,
which
continues
to
demand
that
American
society
reconsider,
in
each
generation,
whether
it
is
living
up
to
the
values
embodied
in
the
Declaration
of
Independence.”
New
City
Chicago