Criminology - General & Miscellaneous, Organized Crime, Corruption & Scandals, Corrupt Business Practices, Law Enforcement - Conduct & Ethics, White Collar & Nonviolent Crime
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Overview
A real-world look at sexual harassment in the workplace and the issues that surround it. Despite years of seminars,programs,and lawsuits,sexual harassment is still one of the most pervasive problems in the workplace. What is wrong? According to Kathleen Neville,it's the failure to deal with it as an issue of power. Neville has worked as aneducator and arbitrator for both sides of the issue,for Fortune 500 comapnies and individuals alike. Using case studies,statistics,and revealing anecdotes,she shows how this struggle has reached epidemic proportions and has imposed high costs on society—cost reflected in lost jobs,lost wages,lost corporate profits,and rising aggravation. This book is sure to spark a national debate about sexual harassment.Editorials
Library Journal
The "one man" is Rick Grajirena, and he deserves the old Hero of the Soviet Union medal, once awarded for acts of truly outstanding valor. Seeking to take advantage of new commercial possibilities in post-Soviet Russia, this young American entrepreneur hurls himself into one selling project after another: Miller beer, a dental clinic, Dr. Seltzer's Hangover Helper, mouthwash. Former AP writer Harper follows Grajirena as he encounters corruption, lethargy, obstruction, naivete, the Russian Mafia, and a skidding ruble. Above all, there is the crushing legacy of the Soviet past, ruining everyone over 35. This is a kind of Dead Souls for the 1990s--our hero bounces back after every disappointment, his faith in Russia bruised but not broken. What a tale of modern urban Russia! A very good read recommended to anyone thinking of investing in that huge potential market.--Robert H. Johnston, McMaster Univ., Hamilton, OntarioKirkus Reviews
Former AP reporter Harper presents a profile in some sort of innocent courage with this engaging story of an entrepreneurial road warrior trying to do business, Western style, in post–Cold War Russia. His protagonist, Rick Grajirena, abandoned the world of professional yachting early in the current decade to pursue the notion of distributing American beer in the heart of the former Evil Empire. It was Miller Time in Moscow, he believed. He convinced the brewer to sell its bubbly commodity—for cash up front—to his new enterprise, which was headquartered in Tampa, Fla. Difficulties began at once. Some were not particularly attributable to the foreign ways; investors became anxious, competition grew, cash flow was tight and relations with the brewery went flat. The real problems, though, lurked in a society that was innocent of free enterprise, that knew nothing of marketing, distribution, management, finances, quality control, customer satisfaction, investors' needs, or profits. Inventory was trapped in a collapsed warehouse or left to freeze on the docks—not a good thing when the inventory is beer. Left in the economic rubble there was the plummeting ruble, infuriating bureaucracy, rampant bribery, confusion, and corruption. And there was Moscow Madness, a syndrome contracted by Westerners who abandoned accustomed sobriety and morals in the White Nights. There was no real business, just New Russian biznesmen, bodyguards and mafiya. Playing by the rules simply didn't work; no one did that. But Grajirena tried—until he went out of business. Still, as the climate improved, he tried some more. From the lobby of the Radisson Slavjanskaya, he hawked the distribution rightsto "Dr. Seltzer's Hangover Helper," a natural for the bibulous Slavs. Then the Russian economy imploded. Yet the intrepid salesman, more Candide than a le Carré character, is still optimistic about his chosen territory. A truly cautionary story of the Wild East, well told and engaging.Book Details
Published
May 1, 1999
Publisher
New York : McGraw-Hill, c1999.
Pages
257
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780070267008