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Artful Negotiation in a Global Economy: Winning the Negotiating Game  by Herb Cohen

AUDIOBOOK: Herb Cohen provides a point-by-point analysis - ten tidbits and practical techniques - that you can use in reconciling all differences.
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Centering: The Body Drop Technique  by Synthia Smith

AUDIO: A quick and easy way to cut through anxiety and become fully present and aware....anytime, anywhere - even in the middle of a business meeting.
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FIRST FRIDAY ARCHIVE:
w/ RIANE EISLER  hosted by Coaching Circles

Listen to our audio archive of Coaching Circles' First Friday Call-In Workshop with RIANE EISLER, international speaker and author of the new book "The Real Wealth of Nations: Creating a Caring Economics".
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Learn 'On the Go' or 'At the Beach'

View our cross cultural integration downloads. Download to your computer, iPod or any MP3 player. Download Now and Make Every Moment Count.
 
Celebrating Diversity  

by Marshall Goldsmith
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To create a positive global community, we need to meet three key challenges.

The rise of the global community brings many opportunities and challenges. In the past, community members could communicate with each other, trade with each other, and share a common culture. In the future, communication, trade, and culture will become much more global.

Opportunities for learning will be greater than ever. “Global connectedness” means that we can interact in a way that leads to rapid and positive learning. More information, however, does not necessarily lead to better decisions. Leaders are now hard pressed to make decisions because they have too much information. Hence, editing and accessing relevant information are vital.

We can’t assume that instant information will lead to long-term quality of communication. Today television addiction is a huge problem. In the future, media addiction (including the Internet) may well pass drug addiction and alcohol addiction as a social problem.

The advantages of global trade are well known. Increased global competition leads to higher-quality products and services at lower prices. Consumers can have access to an incredible diversity of goods that may have been produced anywhere in the world. Poor countries, which have lower labor costs, can “catch up” by doing labor-intensive work that would cost much more in wealthy countries. As the poor countries become more efficient, they gain the purchasing power to buy more goods and services from the rest of the world. The removal of trade barriers leads to an increasingly efficient market.

While, in theory, global trade will create greater product diversity, in practice it sometimes creates greater homogeneity. The “shopping streets” in major cities around the world now look much the same. They tend to have the same clothing, music, and even food. While the stores may have products from more countries, they are becoming the same products. People worldwide are buying the same global brands that are globally advertised, marketed, and distributed. Another cost of global trade may be an increased lack of loyalty and identification with a larger whole.

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It is Our Turn to Help the World 
by Margaret J. Wheatley
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Several years ago, I read of a Buddhist teacher who offered his encouragement to a group that was filled with despair over the state of the world. His advice was simple, profound and placed things in historical context: “It’s just our turn to help the world.” What I love about this statement is that it reminds us of other times and other people who stepped forward to help create the changes that were necessary. We do live in an extraordinary era when, for the first time, humans have altered the planet’s ecology and created consequences which are just beginning to materialize in frightening ways. But throughout human existence, there have always been people willing to step forward to struggle valiantly in the hope that they might reverse the downward course of events. Some succeeded, some did not. But as we face our own time, we need to remember that we stand on very firm and solid shoulders.

In my own work with local communities around the planet, I’ve learned to define leadership quite differently than the norm. A leader is anyone willing to help what they do and label them as courageous, but those who step forward never feel courageous. They just did what felt like the right thing to do.
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TOLERATION FREE ZONE by Janne Weddle
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We all have tolerations – those things that bug us and drive us crazy! These irritants take energy away from us and stall us. Tolerations are simply people, situations, and stuff that are draining our energy and holding us back. Tolerations are things you are putting up with in your life. If your energy was contained in a bucket, then tolerations are the holes in that bucket that are leaking and draining off your energy!

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A Directory of Advocacy and Support Groups for Youth with Emotional, Developmental and Behavioral Disorders

SOCIAL SERVICE: Organizations which provide advocacy and support services for this population who wish to be included in this list may contact the Office of Children's Affairs at the American Psychiatric Association (APA)
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TOP 10 Books on Creativity: Apr '07

1. Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life
Anne Lamott / Paperback
2. Break From the Pack: How to Compete in a Copycat Economy
By Oren Harari / Hardcover
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TOP 10 Books on Negotiation: Apr '07

1. Getting to Yes: Negotiating Agreement Without Giving In
By Roger Fisher, William Ury, Bruce Patton,
2. Power of a Positive No: How to Say No and Still Get to Yes
By William Ury
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