233 research outputs found

    Greenleaf on Servant-Leadership: An Inward Journey

    No full text
    Robert K. Greenleaf coined the term servant-leadership in his seminal 1970 essay, The Servant as Leader. The servant-leader concept has had a deep and lasting influence over the past three decades on many modern leadership ideas and practices. Greenleaf spent his first career of 40 years at AT&T, retiring as director of management research in 1964. That same year Greenleaf founded The Center for Applied Ethics (later renamed The Greenleaf Center for Servant-Leadership). He went on to have an illustrious 25-year second career as an author, a teacher, and a consultant. Greenleaf, who died in 1990, was the author of numerous books and essays on the theme of the servant as leader. His available published books now include The Servant-Leader Within (2003), Servant Leadership: A Journey into the Nature of Legitimate Power and Greatness (2002, 1977), The Power of Servant-Leadership (1998), On Becoming a Servant-Leader (1996), and Seeker and Servant (1996), along with many other separately published essays that are available through The Greenleaf Center. This essay titled The Inward Journey from Greenleaf\u27s Servant Leadership: A Journey into the Nature of Legitimate Power and Greatness contains an elegant, artistic look at the nature of the servant-leader. Here Greenleaf relates how his reading Robert Frost\u27s poem, Directive, deepened his understanding of the courageous nature of the servant as leader

    Greenleaf on Servant-Leadership: Who Is the Servant-Leader?

    No full text
    Robert K. Greenleaf coined the term servant-leadership in his seminal 1970 essay, The Servant as Leader. The servant-leader concept has had a deep and lasting influence over the past three decades on many modern leadership ideas and practices. Greenleaf spent his first career of 40 years at AT&T, retiring as director of management research in 1964. That same year Greenleaf founded The Center for Applied Ethics (later renamed The Greenleaf Center for Servant-Leadership). He went on to have an illustrious 25-year second career as an author, a teacher, and a consultant. Greenleaf, who died in 1990, was the author of numerous books and essays on the theme of the servant as leader. His available published books now include The Servant-Leader Within (2003), Servant-Leadership (2002, 1977), The Power of Servant-Leadership (1998), On Becoming a Servant-Leader (1996), and Seeker and Servant (1996), along with many other separately published essays that are available through The Greenleaf Center

    Greenleaf Maps & Coast Maps Front Cover

    No full text
    The front cover of A Survey of the State of Maine, in Reference to its Geographical Features, Statistics and Political Economy. This work is really a new edition of A statistical view of the district of Maine ... by Moses Greenleaf, Boston, 1816. As that work was issued in connection with Greenleaf\u27s first map of Maine, 1816, so the Survey was accompanied by the author\u27s third map, Map of the state of Maine with the province of New Brunswick by Moses Greenleaf, Portland, 1829. The atlas has no title page, but a label on cover reading: Atlas accompanying Greenleaf\u27s map and statistical survey of Maine ... Portland--Shirley & Hyde publishers. The maps are numbered, and their titles do not agree with those on the cover label. The first four are designed to set forth the American claims as to the disputed Northeastern boundar

    Greenleaf Maps & Coast Maps Title Page

    No full text
    The title page of A Survey of the State of Maine, in Reference to its Geographical Features, Statistics and Political Economy. This work is really a new edition of A statistical view of the district of Maine ... by Moses Greenleaf, Boston, 1816. As that work was issued in connection with Greenleaf\u27s first map of Maine, 1816, so the Survey was accompanied by the author\u27s third map, Map of the state of Maine with the province of New Brunswick by Moses Greenleaf, Portland, 1829. The atlas has no title page, but a label on cover reading: Atlas accompanying Greenleaf\u27s map and statistical survey of Maine ... Portland--Shirley & Hyde publishers. The maps are numbered, and their titles do not agree with those on the cover label. The first four are designed to set forth the American claims as to the disputed Northeastern boundar

    Greenleaf on Servant-Leadership: Who Is the Servant-Leader?

    No full text
    Robert K. Greenleaf coined the term servant-leadership in his seminal 1970 essay, The Servant as Leader. The servant-leader concept has had a deep and lasting influence over the past three decades on many modern leadership ideas and practices. Greenleaf spent his first career of 40 years at AT&T, retiring as director of management research in 1964. That same year Greenleaf founded The Center for Applied Ethics (later renamed The Greenleaf Center for Servant-Leadership). He went on to have an illustrious 25-year second career as an author, a teacher, and a consultant. Greenleaf, who died in 1990, was the author of numerous books and essays on the theme of the servant as leader. His available published books now include The Servant-Leader Within (2003), Servant-Leadership (2002, 1977), The Power of Servant-Leadership (1998), On Becoming a Servant-Leader (1996), and Seeker and Servant (1996), along with many other separately published essays that are available through The Greenleaf Center. This short excerpt from Greenleaf\u27s essay The Servant as Leader contains an essential understanding of the origin of the term and definition of servant-leader. Here Greenleaf relates how his reading of Hermann Hesse\u27s Journey to the East led to his developing the servant-as-leader terminology

    Greenleaf Maps & Coast Maps Vertical sections, exhibiting the comparative altitudes of the principal highlands and rivers …

    No full text
    The map is from A Survey of the State of Maine, in Reference to its Geographical Features, Statistics and Political Economy. This work is really a new edition of A statistical view of the district of Maine ... by Moses Greenleaf, Boston, 1816. As that work was issued in connection with Greenleaf\u27s first map of Maine, 1816, so the Survey was accompanied by the author\u27s third map, Map of the state of Maine with the province of New Brunswick by Moses Greenleaf, Portland, 1829. The atlas has no title page, but a label on cover reading: Atlas accompanying Greenleaf\u27s map and statistical survey of Maine ... Portland--Shirley & Hyde publishers. The maps are numbered, and their titles do not agree with those on the cover label. The first four are designed to set forth the American claims as to the disputed Northeastern boundar

    PROPAGATION AND RECOVERY OF SINGULARITIES IN THE INVERSE CONDUCTIVITY PROBLEM

    No full text
    The ill-posedness of Calderon's inverse conductivity problem, responsible for the poor spatial resolution of electrical impedance tomography (EIT), has been an impetus for the development of hybrid imaging techniques, which compensate for this lack of resolution by coupling with a second type of physical wave, typically modeled by a hyperbolic PDE. We show in two dimensions how, using EIT data alone, to use propagation of singularities for complex principal-type PDEs to efficiently detect interior jumps and other singularities of the conductivity. Analysis of variants of the CGO solutions of Astala and Paivarinta (Ann. Math. (2) 163: 1 (2006), 265-299) allows us to exploit a complex principal-type geometry underlying the problem and show that the leading term in a Born series is an invertible nonlinear generalized Radon transform of the conductivity. The wave front set of all higher-order terms can be characterized, and, under a prior, some refined descriptions are possible. We present numerics to show that this approach is effective for detecting inclusions within inclusions.Peer reviewe

    The Management Development Legacy of Robert Greenleaf

    No full text
    Robert Greenleaf\u27s writings have inspired considerable thought and have been well documented. Robert Greenleaf\u27s name will forever, and appropriately so, be linked with servant-leadership -something he wrote extensively about in his second career as author and consultant. Greenleaf\u27s first career, the 38 years he spent with AT&T, left a legacy of rich innovation. At that time, the official name of the company was American Telephone and Telegraph. We will use AT & T, the contemporary identification, throughout this article. In Greenleaf\u27s work there, we can find the antecedents to contemporary development endeavors such as coaching, action learning, and assessment centers. Although Greenleaf\u27s writing on servant-leadership has been reviewed in considerable detail, relatively little has been written regarding his impact on business and the legacy he left as Director of Management Research at AT&T. This article, focused on the assessment center in theory and practice, is designed to help fill in the voids in this area

    Map of the State of Maine 1820

    No full text
    The map is from A Survey of the State of Maine, in Reference to its Geographical Features, Statistics and Political Economy.This work is really a new edition of A statistical view of the district of Maine ... by Moses Greenleaf, Boston, 1816. As that work was issued in connection with Greenleaf\u27s first map of Maine, 1816, so the Survey was accompanied by the author\u27s third map, Map of the state of Maine with the province of New Brunswick by Moses Greenleaf, Portland, 1829. The atlas has no title page, but a label on cover reading: Atlas accompanying Greenleaf\u27s map and statistical survey of Maine ... Portland--Shirley & Hyde publishers. The maps are numbered, and their titles do not agree with those on the cover label. The first four are designed to set forth the American claims as to the disputed Northeastern boundar

    Two Maps: Sketch from Bouchette\u27s maps of Upper and Lower Canada and the District of Gaspe, exhibiting the true range of highlands ... and the imaginary ranges. 1829 and Sketch of the imaginary ranges of highlands reported by the British surveyors. [n.d.]

    No full text
    The map is from A Survey of the State of Maine, in Reference to its Geographical Features, Statistics and Political Economy. This work is really a new edition of A statistical view of the district of Maine ... by Moses Greenleaf, Boston, 1816. As that work was issued in connection with Greenleaf\u27s first map of Maine, 1816, so the Survey was accompanied by the author\u27s third map, Map of the state of Maine with the province of New Brunswick by Moses Greenleaf, Portland, 1829. The atlas has no title page, but a label on cover reading: Atlas accompanying Greenleaf\u27s map and statistical survey of Maine ... Portland--Shirley & Hyde publishers. The maps are numbered, and their titles do not agree with those on the cover label. The first four are designed to set forth the American claims as to the disputed Northeastern boundar
    corecore