Customer Review: The content is rigid with a concentration in history. New leadership is more elastic and if women leadership is as shown in the book, it need to evolve. Any way is good to know many of the detail and person shown and described in the book.
Customer Review: In this timely anthology of piercing thought on ethical leadership, Rhode issues the call for developing ethical cultures in businesses and organizations in the midst of moral meltdowns. This collection of thirteen scholarly works paints the picture of increasing competing values in society today... more info
Customer Review: A very interesting diagnostic of the major flaws in the U.S. legal system, by Deborah L. Rhode, Professor of Law at Stanford Law School. Well written, this book unveils many of the fundamental reasons for the perception that the public at large has of the lawyers and their trade..... The chapters... more info
Customer Review: As a female college student approaching graduation and faced with the prospect of beginning my career, this book offered insightful information and suggestions concerning women and leadership. This book includes a compilation of several essays written by successful and powerful women and men in... more info
Customer Review: "Rhode breaks little new ground," wrote one critic (Katha Pollitt, for the Atlantic Monthly) about Deborah L. Rhode's 1997 book Speaking of Sex: The Denial of Gender Inequality. While she has admirable intentions, her writing has several shortcomings which destroy the effectiveness of her book, even... more info
Customer Review: It is not surprising that this collection of essays is uneven, since such volumes usually are. Here, only two of the essays stand out as particularly instructive -- David Wilkins's on whether a lawyer should subordinate his or her identity to (certain) professional ideals, and Koniak & Cohan's... more info