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VITA NAME: Warner P. Woodworth EMAIL: [email protected] ADDRESS: Work Department of Organizational Leadership & Strategy Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah 84602 Home 2013 North 500 East, Provo, Utah 84604 PHONE: Work (801) 422-6834 Fax (801) 422-0540 Home (801) 377-7576 WEBSITES: http://marriottschool.byu.edu/emp/wpw http://marriottschool.byu.edu/emp/employee.cfm?emp=wpw EDUCATIONAL BACKGROUND Ph.D. Organizational Behavior/Psychology, University of Michigan 1974 Dissertation: The Politics of Intervention Theory: Ideology in Social Science M.A. Social Psychology, University of Michigan 1971 M.S. Sociology, Brigham Young University 1969 B.S. Sociology, Brigham Young University 1967 PUBLICATIONS/RESEARCH: The Value of Cooperative Efforts in Microenterprise Development: Case Studies in Eastern Europe and Southeast Asia. Journal of Development Entrepreneurship, 2006 (in press).

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Page 1: VITA - marriottschool.netmarriottschool.net/emp/WPW_bak/vita_wpw06.doc  · Web viewNAME: Warner P. Woodworth. EMAIL: warner_woodworth@byu.edu. ADDRESS: Work Department of Organizational

VITA

NAME: Warner P. Woodworth

EMAIL: [email protected]

ADDRESS: Work Department of Organizational Leadership & StrategyBrigham Young University, Provo, Utah 84602

Home 2013 North 500 East, Provo, Utah 84604

PHONE: Work (801) 422-6834 Fax (801) 422-0540Home (801) 377-7576

WEBSITES: http://marriottschool.byu.edu/emp/wpw http://marriottschool.byu.edu/emp/employee.cfm?emp=wpw

EDUCATIONAL BACKGROUND

Ph.D. Organizational Behavior/Psychology, University of Michigan 1974Dissertation: The Politics of Intervention Theory:Ideology in Social Science

M.A. Social Psychology, University of Michigan 1971

M.S. Sociology, Brigham Young University 1969

B.S. Sociology, Brigham Young University 1967

PUBLICATIONS/RESEARCH:

The Value of Cooperative Efforts in Microenterprise Development: Case Studies in Eastern Europe and Southeast Asia. Journal of Development Entrepreneurship, 2006 (in press).

Microcredit: How it Strengthens American Families. Chapter in Handbook of Families in Poverty, Sage Publishing Co., 2006 (in press).

Alleviating Poverty through Microfinance. The Social Science Journal, 2006 (in press).

Evaluating Impacts of Microfinance Institutions Using Guatemalan Data. Managerial Finance, 2006 (in press).

Latter-day Saints and Liberation Theologians: Co-Laborers in the War on Poverty. 20 th Century Christian Theologies and Mormon Thought. SUNY Press, 2006 (in press).

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Gender-Balanced Village Banking in Orissa, India. Business Horizons, 2006 (in process).

Microcredit in Post-Conflict/Conflict, Natural Disaster and Other Difficult Settings. Microcredit Summit Proceedings, 2006 (in press).

Microenterprise Growth and Impacts in Mexico City. Journal of Small Enterprise Development, 2006 (in process).

Microfinance Methodologies in the Philippines. Academy of Management Review, 2006 (in process).

Socio-Economic Factors Arising From Microcredit. Western Social Science Proceedings, 2006 (in press).

The Next Stage of Mondragon: Innovations in Ownership by Workers. Chapter in Global Human Resources. ICFAI University Press, 2006.

What would Jesus Buy? The Collegiate Post, (Special Issue on Globalization), November 2005.

Small Fortunes: Microcredit and the Future of Poverty. PBS Website text, 2005.

Worker Cooperatives From the 20 th Century to the New Millennium: The Rise of Social Enterprises . Toronto: Canadian Cooperative Center, 2005, 231 pp.

Warrior Economics: Financing the Poorest of the Native American Poor. Native American Policy, Vol. XV, pp. 46-59, October 2004.

Local Development Through Microfinance Tools. Chapter in Microfinance Institutions: An Introduction. ICFAI University Press, 2004.

Achieving Self Reliance Through Grassroots Microlending. Published in Proceedings of the Society for the Advancement of Management, Baltimore, Maryland, 2004.

Microfinance: Third Sector Tools for Strengthening Civil Society. New York: NGO Books, 2003, 212 pp.

What Would Jesus Wear? BYU Department of Political Science. November 2003.

Building Social Entrepreneurship. Social Edge. September 2003.

Local Development through Microfinance Tools in Central America. Published in proceedings of Society for the Advancement of Socio Economics, Aix-en-Provence, France, 2003. http://www.sase.org/ conf2003/ papers.html (Hiatt-Woodworth, pdf, 195 kb) (with S. Hiatt).

Microentrepreneurship Impacts in East Africa. Published in proceedings of International Council for Small Business, Belfast, Ireland, 2003, pp. 1-20. http://www.sbaer.uca.edu/research/2003/icsb/papers/ 184.doc (with S. Hiatt).

Innovations in Financing the Poor. Kennedy School, Harvard University. April 10, 2003, pp.1-32. http:// www.cid.harvard.edu/events/pastevents.html.

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Microenterprise Management Skills. American Society of Business and Behavioral Sciences Proceedings. pp. 183-193, 2002.

Trickle-Up Microentrepreneurship: Microenterprise Creation in Poor Communities. Proceedings of the International Council for Small Business, 2002. http://www.sbaer.uca.edu/Research/2002/ ICSB/auth_letter/pdf/022.pdf

Economic Democracy: Essays and Research on Workers' Empowerment. (ed.) Pittsburgh, PA: Sledgehammer Press, 2002, 147 pp.

Facing the Challenges of Family Poverty. Proceedings of 5 th Annual MicroEnterprise Conference. Provo UT: Marriott School. 2002.

Practical Approaches to Ending Poverty. (ed.) Proceedings of 5 th Annual MicroEnterprise Conference, Provo UT: Marriott School. 2002.

Seven Deadly Sins of Globalization. World Social Forum. 2002. E-article printed on http://www.worldsocialforum.org/dynamic2/3/2002.

A Mormon Perspective on Business and Economics. Chapter in Stewart W. Herman (ed.), Spiritual Goods: Religious Traditions and the Practice of Business. Bowling Green, OH: Bowling Green State University Press – Philosophy Documentation Center, 2001, pp. 133-154.

SOAR China Training Manual. (Microenterprise Start-up Methods for Mainland China, Sichuan Women’s Federation). Provo, UT: Kennedy Center for International Studies, 2001.

Microcredit: A Grassroots Policy for International Development. Policy Studies Journal, Vol. 29, No. 2, 2001, pp. 267-282. Republished in edited book Microcredit and Development Policy. Huntington, NY: Nova Science Publishers, 2001, pp. 15-32. (with G. Woller)

Bridging the Digital Divide. Wasatch Digital IQ, September 2001, pp. 40-43.

Microcredit and Third World Development Policy. Guest Editor of Special Research Issue, Policy Studies Journal, Vol. 29, No. 2, 2001, pp. 265-266 Introduction. The entire journal we edited consisted of writings by eight researchers (with G. Woller).

United for Zion: Principles for Uniting the Saints to Eliminate Poverty. Orem, UT: Unitus Publications, 2000, 160 pp. (with J. Grenny and T.K. Manwaring).

Third World Economic Empowerment in the New Millennium. Advanced Management Journal, Vol. 65, No. 4, Autumn 2000, pp. 19-28.

Practicing OD Among the Poor. Conference Proceedings. Atlanta, GA: OD Network, 2000, pp. 210-223.

Humanitarian Efforts in the Developing World. Harvest Magazine (www.harvestmagazine.com). Interview of Warner Woodworth by Thomas Burgess, Fall 2000, (8 pp.).

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Chasqui Humanitarian: Efforts and Strategies to Lift those in Need. In Development Assistance and Humanitarian Aid: The LDS Perspective. Provo, UT: David M. Kennedy Center for International Studies, 2000.

Where to Microfinance? International Journal of Economic Development. Vol. 1, No. 1. pp. 1-29, 1999.

Economic Transformation in the New Millennium. Chapter in Maurine and Scott Proctor (eds.), Charting a New Millennium: The Latter-day Saints in the Coming Century. Salt Lake City, UT: Aspen Books, 1999, pp. 280-300.

The Kingdom and the Third World. Article and readers’ responses in Meridian: The Online Magazine from LDS World, appearing April 18, 1999, pp. 1-18, (with J. Lucas).

Miracles in Honduras: Serving the Least of These. Salt Lake City, UT: Zion Publishers, 1999, 214 pp.

Small Business Strategies For the Third World in the New Millennium: Microenterprise, Microentrepreneurship, and Microfinance. Y2K: Business Issues For the New Millennium, edited by M.H. Abdelsamad and E.R. Myers, Corpus Christi, Texas: Texas A&M University, 1999, pp. 557-564.

Investing In the Poor: Proceedings of the 2 nd Annual Rocky Mountain Microenterprise Conference . Marriott School, BYU, 1999, 103 pp. (with D. Adolphson).

Working Toward Zion. Salt Lake City, UT: Aspen Books (revised, updated, and reprinted) 1999, 484 pp. (with J. Lucas).

Evolution of Mondragon: Changes In a Model of Worker Ownership. Readings & Cases in International Human Resource Management. Edited by M. Mendenhall and G. Oddou. Glenview, I1: Southwest College Publishing, 1999, pp. 336-349.

Alleviating Family Poverty Through Microlending: Proceedings of the First Annual Rocky Mountain Microenterprise Conference, David M. Kennedy Center for International Studies, 1998, 120 pp. (with G. Woller).

Combating Poverty Through OD in the Trenches: Strategies for the Third World. Proceedings of the 18 th

World Organizational Development Congress. Edited by Richard A. Engdahl. Wilmington, NC: University of North Carolina, 1998, pp. 106-116.

Organizational Values, Systems & Structures: Roots of Early Mormon Economics. Encyclia: The Journal of the Utah Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters, Vol. 71, 1998, pp. 147-159.

E4 Organizations. In Achieving Performance Excellence, American Society for Quality (ASQ), 1998, pp. 201-222.

Combating Poverty Through Microfinance. Interview with Dr. Muhammad Yunus of the Grameen Bank in Bangladesh. Exchange Magazine, Spring 1998, pp. 15-17.

The Seven Blunders of the Modern World: Gandhi’s View. Exchange Magazine, Spring 1998, pp. 4-9 (with colleagues).

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Small Really Is Beautiful: Micro Approaches to Third World Development—Microentrepreneurship, Microenterprise, and Microfinance. Ann Arbor, MI: Third World Think Tank, 1997, 290 pp. Second Printing, 1998; Third Printing 2000.

Creating Labor-Management Partnerships. Seoul, Korea: Addison-Wesley, 1997, translation and publication of OD Series, 373 pp. (with C. Meek).

OD As Third World Development: Microenterprise and Poverty Lending Strategies for the Poor. Proceedings of International Association of Management, Organizational Management Division, Vol. 15, No. 1, 1997 (edited by Joseph B. Mosca, Monmouth University), pp. 79-83.

Inventing the Future: Self-reliance in the Philippines. This People Magazine, Summer 1997, pp. 20-26.

Organizational Praxis: Integrating Theory and Hands-On Experience. Educational Administration and Management. Virginia Beach, VA: Maximilian Press, 1997, pp. 63-67.

Saving Ourselves: An interview about my book on Zion, by conducted by Elbert Peck, editor of Sunstone Magazine, April 1997, Vol. 20, No. 1, pp. 52-55.

Five Philosophies of Teaching. Essay published in The Daily Universe, January 22, 1997.

Utah Business and Economics: A Centennial Perspective. Utah Business Magazine (article in special state centennial issue), January 1996, pp. 44-52.

Joseph Smith’s United Order: A Non-Communalistic Interpretation and Brigham Young’s United Order: A Contextual Interpretation. In Brigham Young University Studies, Vol. 30, No. 4, 1996, pp. 228-231 (books reviewed).

Indigenous Management: Microentrepreneurship in the Philippines. Exchange Magazine, Spring 1996, pp. 1-13.

Working Toward Zion. Salt Lake City, UT: Aspen Books, 484 pp. 1996, (with J. Lucas).

Competition vs. Caring: Toward the Soul of a Business. In Ethical Standards: Truth, Trust, and Universality (Long Beach: California State University, 1995), pp. 1-6.

Restoring All Things: The Managerial and Economic Views of Early Mormon Leaders. Brigham Young Magazine, November 1995, pp. 34-41.

Economic Insanity: How Growth-Driven Capitalism is Devouring the American Dream. (Book Review) Exchange, Fall 1995, p. 29.

Organizational Change. Hightstown, NJ: McGraw-Hill, 1995 (edited book of readings), 664 pp.

Creating Labor-Management Partnerships. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley OD Series, 1995 (book, 240 pp. with C. Meek).

Strengthening the Poor. Enterprise Mentors News and Views, Vol. 4:1, 1994, pp. 1-2.5

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The Socio-Economics of Zion. Chapter in The Book of Mormon: 4 Nephi to Moroni. Edited by Monte S. Nyman & Charles D. Tate, Jr., Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1994, pp. 337-352.

Privatization in Belarussia: Organizational Change in the Former USSR, The Organizational Development Journal, Vol. 11, No. 3, 1993, pp. 53-59.

A New Framework for Industrial Relations. Chapter in book by Colin Crouch and Franz Traxler, Corporations and Trade Unions in Changing Industrial Relations, Sage Pub., 1993.

The Redesign of Education: New Paradigms and Practices. In Laying the Foundations (edited by A. LeGrand Richards and Valerie Holladay), Provo: 1992, pp. 89-95.

Weirton Steel: An ESOP Conversion. Chapter in Worker Empowerment: The Struggle for Workplace Democracy (edited by Jon D. Wisman), New York: Intermediate Technology Development Group, 1991, pp. 117-130. (Also translated into Serbo-Croatian, Zagreb, Yugoslavia, 1992).

Managing From Below. Chapter in International Human Resource Management (edited by Mark Mendenhall and Gary Oddou), Boston: PWS-Kent, 1991, pp. 326-333.

Technical Training and Enterprise: Mondragon's Educational System and Its Implications For Other Cooperatives. Economic and Industrial Democracy, Vol. 11, No. 4, 1991, pp. 505-528 (with Chris Meek).

A New Strategy: Combining Manufacturing and Management. Journal of Engineering Technology, Vol. 7, No. 2, Fall 1990, pp. 32-34 (with Vernon Dillenbeck).

Review of The Moral Dimension: Toward a New Economy by Amatai Etzioni. Marriott School of Management Journal, Vol. 4, No. 2, October 1990, pp. 6-8.

Third World Strategies Toward Zion. Sunstone, Vol. 14, No. 5, October 1990, pp. 13-23.

The Remoralization of Management. Executive Excellence, September 1990, pp. 5-7.

Re-Steeling The U.S. Worker Coops, Vol. 8, No. 4, Spring 1989, pp. 13-16. Reprinted in Employee Ownership: The United Steelworkers of America's Experience, USWA Research Department, Pittsburgh, October 1989.

Distorting Labor: Erasing the Past. The Daily Universe, October 5, 1989.

Faith, Hope and Charity in Graduate Education. Exchange, Fall, 1989, pp. 24-28.

Managing Worker Takeovers: The U.S. Experience. Yearbook of Cooperative Enterprise, Oxford, England: Vol. 2, 1989, pp. 23-35.

Cooperative Commonwealth. Worker Co-ops, Toronto, Canada: Vol. 8, No. 3, 1989, pp. 32-33.

Managing by the Numbers. New York: Addison-Wesley, Pub., 1988 (book, 293 pages, with C. Meek and W. G. Dyer).

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The Economics of Sleaze. Baltimore Evening Sun, Dec. 15, 1988, (Also appeared in the Houston Post, Christian Science Monitor, etc.).

Steel Busting in the West. Social Policy, Vol. 18, No. 3, 1988, pp. 53-56.

Participation Pioneers. Workplace Democracy, No. 61, Summer 1988, pp. 11-13.

Why Success Didn't Take: The Hyatt Clark Experience. Management Review, Vol. 77, No. 2, 1988, pp. 50-56.

Paper Entrepreneurs and Absentee Owners. Exchange, Spring 1988, pp. 8-12 (interview).

Consulting for 2nd Order Change. Chapter in The State, Trade Unions, and Self-Management by G. Szell (ed.). New York: Walter de Gruyter & Co., 1988.

Why America Can't Innovate. Harvard International Review, Vol. 10, No. 2, January 1988, pp. 17-43 (with W. G. Dyer and C. Meek).

The Scandalous Pay of the Corporate Elite. Business and Society Review, No. 61, Spring 1987, pp. 22-26. Reprinted in Society's Problems: Sources and Consequences by S. Eitzen (ed.), New Jersey: Allyn and Bacon, Inc.

Brave New Bureaucracy. Dialogue, Vol. 20, No. 3, Fall 1987, pp. 25-36.

Utah Ignored Steel Crisis. Deseret News, April 14, 1987.

Bureaucrats Killing the Economy. Salt Lake Tribune, May 14, 1987.

Beating the Odds. Exchange, Winter 1987, pp. 34-36.

Toughing Out the Lockout. The Guardian, January 21, 1987.

Managing From Below. Journal of Management, Vol. 12, No. 3, 1986, pp. 391-402.

Resisting Economic Concentration Through Worker Insurrection. Review of Institutional Thought, Vol. 3, December 1986.

U.S. Steel Abandons Utah. The Progressive, Vol. 50, No. 5, May 1986.

Atmosphere, Dogmatism, and Loss of Control: Comparisons of Psychiatric Facilities in the U.S.A. and India. In O. Brown and H.W. Henrick (eds.), Human Factors in Organizational Design and Management. Amsterdam: Elsevier Science Publications, 1986.

Utah Passes Into the Third World. In These Times, January 25, 1986.

Blue Collar Boardroom. New Management: The Magazine of Innovative Management. Los Angeles: University of Southern California, Vol. 3, No. 3, 1986, pp. 52-57.

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Populist Economics in the Rockies: Barefoot MBAs?  Workplace Democracy, Vol. 13, No. 3, Winter, 1986, pp. 14-18.

Industrial Democracy at Sea. Work and Occupations, Vol. 13, No. 2, May, 1986.

The Logical Extension of Participation. Directors and Boards, Vol. 10, No. 1, Fall 1985. Reprinted in Management Review's Forum: Should Unions Have a Seat on the Board? February, 1986, pp. 56-59.

Industrial Democracy:   Strategies for Community Revitalization .  Beverly Hills, CA: Sage Publications 1985. (Book, 308 pp.)

Promethean Industrial Relations: Labor, ESOPs, and the Boardroom.  Labor Law Journal, Vol. 36, No. 8, August 1985, pp. 618-624.

Building Worker Democracy.  Dollars and Sense, (No. 108) July-August, 1985, pp. 16-18.

Israeli Hi Tech Co-ops Challenge Popular Myths.   Workplace Democracy, Vol. 12, No. 2, Fall 1985, pp. 10-19.

Eliminado el Elitismo en el Desarrollo Organizacional.  Experien cias de Participacion en Organizaciones , Monterrey, Mexico:  University of Monterrey, 1985, pp. 27-42.

Unionbusting:  The Corporate Assault on Organized Labor.  Business and Society Review, No. 52, Winter 1985, pp. 15-20.

Turning Guns Into Butter. The Desert Sun: Utah's Peace News, Vol. 3, No. 1, Winter 1985. Is Geneva Failing?  Central Utah Journal, January 20, 1985.

The Third Stage of Cooperation in the United States.  Annals of Public and Co - operative Economy , Vol. 56, No.3, 1984, pp. 239-252.

Witch Doctors, Messianics, Sorcerers, and OD Consultants: Parallels and Paradigms. In Douglas B. Gutknecht (ed.), Meeting Organization and Human Resource Challenges: Perspectives, Issues, and Strategies. Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America, 1984, pp. 407-431.

De - Steeling:   The Fall of U.S.   Steel and Implications for Utah .  Provo:  Alexander Press, 1984. (Revised 1985, book of 224 pp.)

Hard Hats in the Boardroom.  In J. B. Ritchie and Paul Thompson (eds.), Organization and People (3rd edition), St. Paul:  West Publishing Co., 1984, pp. 401-411.

"Exploitable" Utah Vulnerable to Corporate Irresponsibility.  The Salt Lake Tribune, August 12, 1984.

Reagan's Neutron Economics.  Central Utah Journal, February 29, 1984.

Buying a Piece of GM.  Workplace Democracy, Vol. 10, No. 3, Summer 1983, pp. 2-18.

Toward An Underdog OB.  OBTS Newsletter and Commentary, Vol. 1, No. 2, October 1983.8

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Assault on the Working Class, Industrial Worker, Vol. 80, No. 12, 1983.

Pain, Pathos and Paranoia in the Classroom.  Exchange:   The Organizational Behavior Teaching Journal , Vol. 7 No. 4, 1983, pp. 21-25 (with David Ulrich, University of Michigan).

Collective Bargaining:  Concessions or Control?  In Industrial Relations Research Association Series, Barbara D. Dennis (ed.), New York, 1983, pp. 418-424.

Cooperative Cabbies.  Workplace Democracy, Vol. 10, No. 2, 1983 (with Stewart Black).

Creating a Culture of Worker Participation. Employee Ownership, Vol. 2, No. 3, September 1982. Reprinted in Employee Ownership: A Reader (Washington, D.C.: National Center for Employee Ownership, 1985).

Role Taking Approaches of Social Scientists:  Four Typologies.  Sociological Practice, Vol. 4, No. 1, 1982, pp. 5-24.

Employee Ownership and Industrial Relations:  The Rath Case.  National Productivity Review, Vol. 1, No. 2 , Spring 1982, pp. 151-163 (with Chris Meek, Boston College).

Tearing Down the Pyramids.  Contemporary Sociology, Vol. 11, No. 2, March 1982, pp. 173-175.

Organizational Development:  A Closer Scrutiny.  Human Relations, Vol. 35, No. 4, 1982, pp. 307-319.

Modelos de Propiedad de los Trabajadores y Control Obrero en los Estados Unidos de Norteamerica.  Santiago Roca (ed.), La Autoges tion en America Latina y El Caribe , Lima, Peru:  CLA, 1981, pp. 155-173.

An Advocacy Approach to Teaching Organizational Behavior.  J. Clawson and G. Akin (eds.), Proceedings.  Organizational Behavior Teaching Conference, Cambridge:  Harvard University, 1981, pp. 60-62.

The Emergence of Economic Democracy in the United States.  Economic Analysis and Workers' Management, Vol. 15, No. 2, 1981, pp. 207-218.

Forms of Employee Ownership and Workers' Control.  Sociology of Work and Occupations, Vol. 8, No. 2, 1981, pp. 195-200.

Workers' Self-Management and a New World Order.  Workplace Democracy, Vol. 8, No. 2, 1981, pp. 11-14.

Consultants, Conspirators, and Colonizers.  Group and Organiza tion Studies , Vol. 6, No. 1, 1981, pp. 57-64.

Towards a Labour-Owned Economy in the United States.  Labour and Society, Vol. 6, No. 1, 1981, pp. 41-56.

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Transition to Workers' Self-Management.  British Journal of Industrial Relations, (London School of Economics), Vol. 29, No. 1, 1981, pp. 127-28.

OD Texts:  How Do You Use Them?  Exchange:   The Organizational Behavior Teaching Journal , Vol. 6, No. 1, Spring 1981, pp. 25-31 (with Randy Stott).

Workers As Bosses.  Social Policy, Vol. 11, No. 4, January/February, 1981, pp. 40-45.

The Free Market System:  A Dialogue with Jim Kearl and Warner Woodworth.  Century 2, Fall 1980, pp. 16-34.

A Critical Assessment of Organizational Development Theory and Practice.  Academy of Management Proceedings, Richard C. Huseman (ed.) Athens, Georgia:  1980, pp. 209-213 (with Gordon Meyer and Norman Smallwood).

Workers Take Over.  The New York Times, Wednesday, June 25, 1980, p. 27.

Information in Latin American Organizations:  Some Cautions.  Management International Review, Vol. 20, No. 2, 1980, pp. 61-70.

A Counter to Plant Shutdowns.  Self - Management , Vol. 7, No. 2, Winter 1980, pp. 29-32.

Witch Doctors, Messianics, Sorcerers, and OD Consultants:  Parallels and Paradigms.  Organizational Dynamics, Vol. 8, No. 2, Autumn 1979, pp. 17-33 (with Reed Nelson).

A Self-Structured Approach Toward De-Institutionalizing the Classroom.  The Organizational Behavior Teaching Journal, Vol. 4, No. 3, 1979, pp. 13-18.

New Forms of Work Organization.  Self - Management , Washington, D.C., Vol. 6., No. 4, Summer 1979.

The Female Takeover:  Threat or Opportunity?  The Personnel Administrator, Vol. 24, No. 1, January 1979, pp. 19-28.

Consulting with Conflicting Parties:  A Method for Achieving Mixed Results.  National Academy of Management Proceedings, J.C. Susbauer (ed.), 1978, pp. 147-152.

Organizational Schmoozing.  Review of Ten Thousand Working Days appearing in the Organizational Behavior Teaching Journal, Vol. 3, No. 3, 1978.

From Vanguard to Rearguard:  The Politics of the Women's Movement in Utah.  Exponent II, Cambridge, Mass., Vol. 4, No. 2, Winter 1978.

A Process for Addressing Social Issues:  Management and Labor Self Interests and Mutual Objectives. Southwest Academy of Management Proceedings, C. Donald Porterfield, (ed.), 1978, pp. 223-227.

Women Working. Exchange Magazine, Vol. 2, No. 2, Spring 1978, pp. 29-35.

The Return to Literacy. Exchange Magazine, Vol. 1, No. 1, Fall 1976, pp. 19-22.10

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Perspectives on Systems Theory.  Chapter in book of readings edited by M.G. Becakehary, Systems Theory.  Rio de Janeiro:  UNESCO, 1975.

TECHNICAL REPORTS

Results of SOAR China Microcredit and Community Organizing, BYU, Fall 2001 (42 pp.).

Strategic Plan for Microenterprise Implementation in Brazil. Summer 2001 (11 pp.).

Training Manual for Development of Sichuan Province, Western China. Spring 2001 (246 pp.).

Development of Rural Western China: Technical Report. January 2001 (32 pp.).

Series on Third World Economic Development: Cooperatives Handbook: Manual for the formation of worker-owned co-ops (11 pp.) Summer 2000; The Microcredit Handbook: A “how-to” manual for establishing microcredit/village banking programs in the Third World (21 pp.) Fall 2000; Third World Education Handbook: Guide for literacy and schooling among the global poor (19 pp.) Fall 2000 (co-authored with others).

The UNITUS Action Group Organizing Handbook. Summer 2000 (17 pp.).

Ouelessebougou- Utah Alliance Technical Assessment of West Africa Programs (1999).

The Stewardship Project: A Handbook for Humanitarian Service In Central America (1999) 305 pp.

Training Manuals for Africa NGOs: 1) Leadership Training, 2) Basic Small Business Skills for Microenterprise, 3) Basic Financial Skills for Micro Credit (1996).

Micro Lending Needs and Opportunities in Africa: Technical Assistance Analysis, December 1995 (22 pp.).

Linking Technology and Entrepreneurship Report. Proceedings of International Conference on Technology and Education, Toronto, Canada, May 1991, 19 pp. (with Chris Meek).

The Informal Economy and Microentrepreneurs in the Philippines: Research Analysis, 1990 (42 pp.).

Testimony Prepared for U.S. Congressional Hearings on the Steel Industry, Employment and Housing Subcommittee of the House Government Operations Committee, April 18, 1986 (36 pp).

Plant Shutdowns, Mass Layoffs, and Women Workers: The Barbizon Closing Five Years After. Impact study of an industrial closing on female employees, report to the Women's Research Institute, Spring, 1986 (131 pp).

Mountain States Steel.  Feasibility study and business plan for employee ESOP Task Force.  Lindon, Utah, May 1985, (117 pp).

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D-M-E Top Management Report.  Analysis of corporate merger difficulties and management transitions.  Detroit, Michigan, September 1984.

Hyatt Clark Industries.  History and analysis of employee buyout.  Urban Development Action Grant.  New Jersey, January 1983.

A Participatory Approach to Organization Building in Mexico:  Grassroots Empowerment on the Ejidos.  Tamalipas, Mexico, Summer 1983.

Report on the Rath Packing Company.  Economic Development Administration (Technical Assistance Project).  Waterloo, Iowa, July 1982.

In Support of Workers' Cooperatives.  Testimony read at public hearings regarding federal policy for the newly established National Consumer Cooperative Bank.  Cleveland, Ohio, February 2, 1980.

Rath Packing Company.  Historical analysis of events leading to the shift to employee ownership.  Waterloo, Iowa, December 1979.

Muskegon Area Labor-Management Committee.  Establishing a Community - Wide Labor - Management Committee.  National Center for Productivity and Quality of Working Life, Washington, D.C., 1978, pp. 22-25.

Improving Sales and Manufacturing Operations:  DME Company.  Technical Report for Monterey Park, California Facility, September 1978.

Organizational Analysis.  Technical Report for Clark Equipment Co., International Truck Division.  Battle Creek, Michigan, November 1978.

The Surfacing of Problem Areas and Opportunities:  A Report on Evaluation of Performance of Microlite, S.A., Rio de Janeiro:  Arthur D. Little, Inc., 1975.

Developing Cross-Functional Teams at DME.  DME-VSI Corporation:  Madison Heights, Michigan, 1974 (with Robert Toronto).

Improving Business Performance and Effectiveness.  Ann Arbor:  Rensis Likert Associates, Inc., First Printing, May 1974.

Revolutionary Social Science:  Some Modest Proposals for Changing Contemporary Practices.  Ann Arbor, Graduate School Candidacy Paper, University of Michigan, 1973 (112 pp.).

The Management of Fisher Body Human Resources.  Grand Rapids, Michigan:  Fisher Body-General Motors, 1973 (43 pp.).

Muskegon Project Priority.  Muskegon, Michigan:  Industrial Expansion Commission, 1972.

Management/Labor Perceptions:  A County-Wide Analysis.  Muskegon:  Industrial Expansion Commission, 1972.

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Developing the Battle Creek Area Community Organization.  Ann Arbor:  Institute for Social Research, 1971, 63 pp. (with Floyd C. Mann and Warrington Parker).

Organizational Innovation.  Alcoa Aluminum:  Lafayette, Indiana Works, 1971.

The Effects of Laboratory Training on Self - Actualization and Disclosure .  Provo, Utah:  Brigham Young University, M.S. Thesis, 1969, 103 pp.

ACADEMIC POSITIONS

Professor--Brigham Young University, Department of Organizational Behavior. Teaching in the areas of organizational change, management ethics, industrial democracy, and Third World development, Social Entrepreneurship, and Civil Society.

1976 - Present

Visiting Professor--Division of Behavioral Sciences, Brigham Young University, Hawaii Campus: Human Resource Development.

1986-87

Visiting Professor--Graduate School of Business Administration,University of Michigan: organizational behavior and industrial relations.

1983

Visiting Scholar--International Institute of Labor Studies, Geneva, Switzerland: Comparative Labor Relations.

1980

Visiting Professor--Pontificia Universidade of Rio de Janeiro, joint appointment in Department of Psychology and Graduate School of Business Administration:  social psychology, group dynamics, and organization theory.

1974-75

Lecturer--Wayne State University, School of Business Administration: courses in organization theory and corporate social responsibility.

1972-74

CONFERENCES, ACADEMIC AND PROFESSIONAL MEETINGS

Microcredit Impacts: Economic Self-Reliance Interventions. Presentation to CESR Annual Research Forum, Marriott School, BYU, Provo, December 2, 2005.

Empowering the Poor Through Microcredit Methodologies. Presented to PBS premier showing of KBYU, documentary film, November 15, 2005.

Liderazgo Catalizador Para el Siglo 21 (Catalytic Leadership for the 21st Century). Presentation to Management Society, Panama City, Panama, October 13, 2006.

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Microenterprise and Microcredit as Tools for Incubating Change. Presentation to government leaders, policymakers, and corporate executives, City of Knowledge, Panama, October 12, 2005.

Social Performance and Economic Dimensions of Microfinance NGOS. Presentation to the Academey of Management, Honolulu, Hawaii. August 9, 2005.

Varieties of Social Entrepreneurship in Business Schools. Presented to BYU-Hawaii faculty and students, Laie, Hawaii, August 8, 2005.

Building Civil Society Through Sustainable Economic Development. Presentation at the University of Bangkok, Thailand, August 3, 2005.

Establishing Worker-Owned Cooperatives: Pioneers for Re-Building Khao Lak Villages. Speech at the inauguration of the Village Women/Pearl Jewelry-Makers, Khao Lak, Thailand, July 24, 2005.

Microenterprise Impacts: Stories of Success and Growth. Presentation to National BYU Alumni, Marriott School, BYU, June 2005.

Empowering the Poor Who Struggle and Suffer. Utah Valley Community, April 2005.

The Call to Action: Becoming Social Entrepreneurs in Central America. Presentation to Community Volunteers/Global Change Agents, Provo, UT, April 19, 2005.

Transforming the Third World. Presentation to the Boston Community. Cambridge, MA, March 2005.

Creating Effective Social Enterprises. Presentation at Harvard University, Cambridge, MA March 2005.

Launching the Joseph Smith Rescue Brigade. Presentation at Brigham Young University, Provo, UT, March 2005.

Bottom-Up Economic Self-Reliance Interventions/Action Research from the Grassroots. Presentation at the 8th Annual Self-Reliance Conference, BYU, Provo, UT, March 10, 2005.

The 7 Habits of Highly Ineffective ESR. Presentation at the 8 th Annual ESR Conference, BYU, March 10, 2005.

The Four Quartets of Serving the Poor. Keynote address to Social Innovator of the Year Banquet, BYU, Provo, UT, March 10, 2005.

Strengthening Third World Families Through Self Reliance. Presentation at Family Outreach Conference (two presentations), Provo, UT, March 10-11, 2005.

Spectrum of Development. Panelist at the 8th Annual ESR Conference, BYU, Provo, March 11, 2005.

Nonformal Education Tools to Build Global Social and Economic Justice. Presentation at Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA, March 24, 2005.

Liberation Theology and Mormonism. Presentation at Utah Valley State College Academic Conference: Mormonism and Social Justice, Orem, UT, March 4, 2005.

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Global Transformation From the Bottom Up: Citizen Initiatives to Build Civil Society. Presentation at Community Women’s Association, Phoenix, AZ, January 18, 2005.

The Future of Microfinance: New Innovations. Presentation to Wharton Business School, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, January 14, 2005.

Economic Self-Reliance: Research on Microcredit Impacts. Presentation to BYU Center for Economic Self-Reliance Advisory Board, Marriott School, November, 2004.

Global Policy Toward Corruption: Angola’s Mislaid Billions. Presentation in faculty debate with professors from Columbia Business School, Harvard and Rutgers to National Conference with MBAs from all over the nation, New York City, NY, November 2004.

Microfinance: Which Strategies Work? Presentation at Net Impact Conference, Columbia University, NYC, November, 2004.

Business Leaders Building a Better World, Chair and Panelist at Net Impact Conference, Columbia University, NYC, November 2004.

Traditional or Transformational Leadership? Presented at Utah Valley State College, Annual Leadership Conference, UVSC, Orem, Utah, October 2004.

Tribal Entrepreneurship: Microfinance for Indian Self-Reliance. Presentation at the International Academy for Management and Business Conference (IAMB), Las Vegas, Nevada, October 2004.

Knowledge as the Path to Socio-Economic Justice. Presentation at 12 th World Congress of Comparative Education, Havana, Cuba, October 2004.

Guatemala : A Case Study on Evaluating the Impacts of Microfinance on Poverty. Presentation to International Statistics Association, Amann, Jordan, October 2004.

50,000 Malnourished Children: How Can We Help? Presentation to Theology and Intellectuals Symposium, Salt Lake City, UT August 2004.

Transition Tools for Growth of the Informal Economy in the New Russia. Presentation to Russian Delegation at the Open World Program/U.S. Congress, May 2004.

The Many Faces of Globalization. Presentation to the World Trade Association, Salt Lake City, UT, May 2004.

Alleviating Poverty Through Microfinance: Village Banking Outcomes in Central America. Presentation at Western Social Science Association, Salt Lake City, UT, April 2004.

Constructing Civil Society: The Architecture of Social Entrepreneurship to Empower the Poor. Presentation at the 7th Annual MicroEnterprise Conference, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT, March 2004.

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Mobilizing Business Schools to Accelerate Global Microcredit. Presentation to Darden School Faculty and Students, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, March 2004.

How Microentrepreneurship Strengthens Families in the Developing World. Presentation to world-wide scholars participating in the Families and Poverty Research Conference, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT, March 2004.

Achieving Self Reliance Through Grassroots Microlending. Presentation to Society for the Advancement of Management Conference, Baltimore, MD, March 2004.

Building an Academic Network for Expanding Social Entrepreneurship. Presentation to Skoll World Forum on Social Entrepreneurship at Oxford University, Oxford, UK, March 2004.

The Power of One: Making a Difference in the World. Presentation as keynote speaker, Eagle Condor Foundation Inaugural Dinner, Salt Lake City, UT, February 2004.

Universities as Incubators of Social Action. Presentation to World Social Forum, Mumbai, India, January 2004.

Doing Good and Doing Well: Ethics and Business Values for a Better World. Presentation to MBA students and faculty, University of Bombay, Mumbai, India, January 2004.

Socio-Economic Results of Microfinance in Mexico and Ecuador. Presentation to the Center for Economic Self-Reliance, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT, January 2004.

Microcredit and Environmental Sustainability: The Ethics of Corporate Social Responsibility. Presentation at Greening of Industry Network, San Francisco, California, October 15, 2003.

Applying Third World Village Banking Methodologies to U.S. Urban Settings. Presentation to Latino MicroBusiness Mentors, Marriott School, June 27, 2003.

The Ethics of Sweatshops, Multinational Corporations, and American Shoppers. Presentation to BYU students, faculty and general public, Provo, Utah, November 13, 2003.

Scaling Up: A Five Year Plan for Mentores Empresariales. Presentation to staff of NGO Mentores Empresariales, Guatemala City, August 5, 2003.

Ten Million African AIDS Orphans: What Would Jesus Have Us Do? Panelist at a religious studies conference, Salt Lake City, Utah, August 2003.

Social Responsibilities/Opportunities for Firms to Do Good. Presentation to Central American Corporate Executives, Guatemala City, July 21, 2003.

Local Development through Microfinance Tools in Central America. Presentation at International Conference of Society for the Advancement of Socio Economics, Aix-en-Provence, France, June 26-28, 2003 (with S. Hiatt).

Microentrepreneurship Impacts in East Africa. Presentation at International Council for Small Business Conference (ICSB), Belfast, Northern Ireland, June 15-18, 2003 (with S. Hiatt).

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Third Sector Tools for Strengthening Civil Society. Presentation at London School of Economics, London, England, June 10, 2003.

LDS Praxis: Integrating Gospel Teachings with Social Actions. Presentation at conference on Mormon studies, Washington, D.C., May 3, 2003.

Empowering Brazil—Empowering College Students. Presentation to Utah Valley State College students and faculty, Orem, Utah, April 17, 2003.

Establishing a Global Clearinghouse for Research and Jobs in the Microfinance Industry. Roundtable discussion with officials from the Master of Public Administration, Harvard Leadership Series, Center for International Development, and Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, April 10, 2003.

The Role of Rising Academics in Microenterprise. Presentation to faculty and students of various Harvard programs, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, April 10, 2003.

Socio Economic Results of Microfinance in Mexico and Ecuador. Presentation at Utah Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Letters Conference, Weber State University, Ogden, Utah, April 2003 (with S. Hiatt).

Mobilizing OD Consultants to Empower the Poor. Presentation at MOB Annual Practitioners Conference, Provo, Utah, March 27, 2003.

NGO Strategies for Organizational Development. Presentation at 6th Annual MicroEnterprise Conference, BYU, Provo, Utah, March 11-13, 2003 (with J. Boehme and N. Smallwood).

Another Economy is Possible. Presentation at the World Social Forum, Porto Alegre, Brazil, January 24, 2003.

Making a Difference: LDS Endeavors to Build a Better World. Presentation at Management Society, Sacramento, California. December 10, 2002.

Utilizing Third World Microfinance in U.S. Inner-City Contexts. Presentation to Utah Chamber of Commerce and Utah Valley Bankers, Provo, Utah, December 5, 2002.

Mobilizing Social Action Groups to Advocate Microfinance Funding from Governments Presentation at the Microcredit Summit +5, New York, NY, November 12, 2002 (with J.Hatch, A. Counts and J. Carter).

Universities and Microcredit: Methods for Making Business Schools into Incubators to Fight Poverty. Presentation at the Microcredit Summit +5, New York, NY, November 13, 2002 (with N. Hill and G. Woller).

How LDS Families are Changing the World. Presentation to the BYU Alumni Association, Oakland California, October 25, 2002.

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Using OD to Build Long-term Sustainability. Presentation at Socio-Technical Systems Workshop, New Orleans, Louisiana, October 8-10, 2002.

Building a Third World Alliance: Solidarity Between North/South Partners. Presentation at NGO Network, San Salvador, El Salvador, July 23-26, 2002.

Trickle-Up Microentrepreneurship: Microenterprise Creation in Poor Communities. Presentation at the International Council for Small Business Conference (ICSB), San Juan, Puerto Rico, June 15-16, 2002.

Teaching as Congruence: Inner Passion with Global Strategies to Change the World. Presentation at OB Teaching Conference, Orange, California, June 19-21, 2002.

Mobilizing Change Agents to Empower Have-Nots: Using OD in the Trenches. Presentation for to(Squared) E: the other organizational event, David M. Kennedy Center, BYU, Provo, Utah, April 4-5, 2002.

Linking U.S. Based NGOs into a National Network for Lifting the Global Poor. Presentation to Action Against Poverty, Thanksgiving Point, Lehi, Utah, April 13, 2002.

Facing the Challenges of Family Poverty. Presentation at the 5th Annual MicroEnterprise Conference, BYU, Provo, Utah, March 15-16, 2002.

The Seven Deadly Sins of Globalization. Presentation at the World Social Forum, Porto Alegre, Brazil, February 15-18, 2002.

Microenterprise Management Skills. Presentation at the American Society of Business and Behavioral Sciences, Las Vegas, Nevada, February 8-10, 2002.

Building a Movement for Uplifting Poor Families. Presentation for Utah Network of NGOs, Orem, Utah,

January 16, 2002.

Is Academic Social Entrepreneurship an Oxymoron? Presentation at the National Gathering of Social Entrepreneurs, Seattle, Washington, November 28 – December 1, 2001.

Women and Microcredit. Presentation to the College of Business and Technology Research Services, Western Illinois University, Macomb, Illinois, October 19, 2001.

Internationalizing Student Outreach and Service Learning. Workshop for campus staff, faculty and administrators. Western Illinois University, Macomb, Illinois, October 18, 2001.

World Trade and the Poor. Presentation to MBA students, WIU, Macomb, Illinois, October 18, 2001.

The Socio-Economics of Mormons. Paper read to the Department of Economics faculty and doctoral students, Western Illinois University, Macomb, Illinois, October 17, 2001.

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Practical Steps to Building Microcredit NGOs. Speech to the Latin American Microcredit Summit, Puebla, Mexico, October 12, 2001 (with Muhammad Yunus).

Accomplishing BYU’s Educational Institution Plan (1997-2001). Paper read at the Latin American Microcredit Summit, Puebla, Mexico, October 11, 2001.

How to Facilitate Global Change Efforts. Presentation to the New York Metropolitan Professional Association, New York City, September 22, 2001.

The Social Responsibility of Business. Presentation to the Business Department, Salt Lake Community College, September 17, 2001.

Business School Innovations to Combat Global Poverty. “Showcase” paper at the Academy of Management, Washington, D.C., August 3-7, 2001.

Microentrepreneurship as a Tool for Job Creation. Presentation to Central Santa Catarina Chamber of Commerce, Brazil, June 29, 2001.

How to Establish an Incubator for Launching New Enterprises. Workshop for Engineers and Executives, Center for Business and Technology, Criciuma, Brazil, June 29, 2001.

U.S. Models of Regional Economic Growth: The Utah Experience. Speech to Executive MBA Start-Up Class, State University of Santa Catarina, Brazil, June 28, 2001.

The Promise of Microfinance. Speech at the Inauguration of Credisol, a new bank for the poor. Tubarao, Brazil, June 26, 2001.

Income-Generating Experiences from Africa and Asia. Speech to Administracao Na Faculdade Estacio de Sa de Santa Catarina, Brazil, June 25, 2001.

Government and Public Entrepreneurship. Presentation to Mayors, Legislators and Regional Public Servants. Cascacao, Brazil, June 21, 2001.

Building Capacity Among the Poor. Presentation to bankers and business leaders. Criciuma, Brazil, June 20, 2001.

Job Creation Through the Strategy of Microenterprise. Presentation to the Chamber of Commerce, Florianopolis, Brazil, July 19, 2001.

Village Banking Tools. Speech to the Management Sciences Research Institute, Florianopolis, Brazil, June 19, 2001.

Microentrepreneurship and Service Learning. Presentation to MBAs at the Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil, June 18, 2001.

The Potential of Microcredit to Improve Brazil. Speech to the Governor and Legislature of Santa Catarina, Brazil, June 18, 2001.

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How Business Entrepreneurs May Become Social Entrepreneurs. Workshop for Utah Valley Entrepreneurial Forum, Provo, Utah, May 10, 2001.

Business Ethics and its Power to Change the World. Guest speaker at the Executive Lecture Series, Utah Valley State College, Orem, Utah, April 12, 2001.

Gender Issues in Microcredit. Presentation at the 4 th Annual Microenterprise Conference, BYU, April 6-7, 2001 (with Lisa Jones).

Creating a Global Wholesale Fund to Economically Empower the Poor. Theme of a week-long symposium at the Grameen Bank Headquarters, Dhaka, Bangladesh, January 8-12, 2001.

Microfinance as a Tool for Capacity Building. Day-long training program for officials of government, academic, and communist organizations, along with peasant womens’ groups in Sichuan Province of Western China, December 18, 2000.

Education: The Path to a Better Future. Presentation to over a thousand faculty, students and government officials, and Yi minority people in Mianning County, China, December 16, 2000.

Strategic Initiatives for Empowering Third World Women. Speech to poverty alleviation officials, Yunnan Province. Kunming, China, December 14, 2000.

Communism vs. Capitalism: Microcredit as a Third Alternative. Presentation to the Womens’ Federation of Guangxi Province. Nanning City, China, December 11, 2000.

Transforming Poor Societies Around the Globe. Presentation to expatriate managers, Paris, France, November 12, 2000.

OD Among the Poor. Paper read at the Organization Development Network (ODN), Atlanta, Georgia, October 29-November 2, 2000.

Mindsets for Changing the World. Speech at the Symposium on Service and Learning, Utah Valley State College, Orem, Utah, October 24, 2000. Also served as a panelist on “Religious, Ethical and Other Motivations for Service.”

The Plight and Pathos of Poor Latter-day Saints. Keynote speaker at the Unitus Economic Summit, Salt Lake City, Utah, October 10, 2000.

Chasqui Humanitarian: Efforts and Strategies to Lift those in Need. Paper presented at the 11 th Annual Conference of the International Society, David M. Kennedy Center for International Studies, Provo, Utah, August 14, 2000.

Combating Socio-Economic Injustice Through Cooperative Microcredit Strategies. Paper read at the annual conference for the Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics, London School of Economics, London, UK: July 2000.

Alleviating Human Suffering Through Cooperative Microenterprise Formation and Access to Financing for the Poor. Paper presented at the International Union of Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences, Beijing, China, July 26, 2000.

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Empowering Women Through Microcredit: Integrating Anthropology and Economics. Paper for the 2000 Inter-Congress on Metropolitan Ethnic Cultures, Beijing, China (with L. Jones), July 25, 2000.

Improving the World, One Family at a Time. Presentation to the Visayas Enterprise Foundation (VEF), Cebu, the Philippines, July 22, 2000.

How Mormon Entrepreneurs Can Change the World. Graduation speaker at commencement ceremonies of the Academy for Creating Enterprise (ACE), Cebu, the Philippines, July 21, 2000.

The Global Context for Doing Village Banking. Presentation to Philippines Enterprise Development Foundation (PEDF), Manila, the Philippines, July 20, 2000.

Indigenous Economic Development: Global Methods to Lift Those who Suffer. Speech to Latin American Welfare Officials, Ollantaytambo, Peru, June 10, 2000.

Building Strong NGOs: From the Outside In. Workshop conducted at the Association for Economic Opportunity. Lowell, MA: May 11-14, 2000.

Social Development as Village Development: Strategies for Grassroots Change in Africa. Paper read at the 42nd Annual Conference of the Western Social Sciences Association, Sociology Section. San Diego, CA, April 28, 2000.

Microcredit in Asia: Assessing the Economic Results of Microfinance and Microentrepreneurship. Paper read at the International Finance Section, Western Social Sciences Association, San Diego, CA, April 27, 2000.

Applying Social Science in Behalf of the Third World Poor: New Programs for Development (with S. Morris). Utah Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters, Southern Utah University, Cedar City, UT: April 14, 2000.

Living Faith, Leading Change: Integrating Spirit and Work. Presentation at the Third Annual Business and Spirit Conference. Babson College, Wellesley, MA: March 22-24, 2000.

Putting Socio-Economic Doctrines into Practice: The Humanitarian Legacy of President Joseph F. Smith. Paper read at Annual Church History Conference, BYU, March 18, 2000.

Microcredit as a Tool for Disaster Relief: The HELP Honduras Story. Presentation at the 3 rd Annual Microenterprise Conference, BYU, March 17, 2000.

The Spiritual Meaning of Laboring in Poor African Villages. Remarks in Bamako, West Africa, December 29, 1999.

Developing Environs of Empowerment. Presentation to participants in LDS humanitarian ventures. Salt Lake City, Utah, October 4, 1999.

Home-Based Businesses: A Model for the New Millennium. Keynote speaker at the Utah State Small Business Development Center’s Annual Conference, September 29, 1999.

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Learning in the Field: Using Entrepreneurial Skills to Help Others. Presenter at the Entrepreneurship Conference, Marriott School. Center for Entrepreneurship, BYU, September 24, 1999.

The Struggle to Integrate Solutions to Poverty. Comments at the Annual Meeting, Credit with Education Learning Exchange. This event is held once a year in various areas of the world. It brings together a mixture of some 60 NGO officials from Asia, Africa, and Latin America that collectively loan some $120 million to over two million have-nots, July 25-29, 1999.

Modern Mormon Pioneers: Celebration of July 24 th Pioneer Day in East Africa. Keynote speech to the 120 members of the PRINCE Cooperative, Nairobi, Kenya, July 24, 1999.

International Service and Learning: A Model for Social Change. Presentation at a campus-wide faculty forum, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, July 12, 1999.

Challenges of Global Aid: Solution or Disaster? Remarks at a community awareness program, Springville Art Museum, June 16, 1999.

The Christian’s Response to Human Suffering. St. Mary’s Episcopal Church, Provo, Utah, June 9, 1999.

Village Banking Methods: Tools for Lifting the Poor. Presentation to NGO representatives in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, May 14, 1999.

Uplifting “the Least” of the Developing World. Presentation at a symposium, Utah Valley State College, Orem, Utah, April 9, 1999.

Social Justice Through Poverty Alleviation. Presentation at Utah Valley State College, April 9, 1999, 300 attendees.

Building a Community of Mormon Charitable Organizations. Opening remarks at the First International Development Network (IDN) meeting, April 1, 1999.

Humanitarian Outreach to the World’s Poor and Needy. Speech at Salt Lake City’s premier charity event for 800 Utahns at Little America Hotel, March 30, 1999.

Small Banking Strategies for the Third World in the New Millennium. Paper presented at the Society for Advancement of Management International Conference, Las Vegas, Nevada, March 28-30, 1999.

How to Start Your Own Village Bank. Paper presented at the 2nd Annual Microenterprise Conference, Brigham Young University, March 27, 1999.

Global NGOs and the Future of Microcredit. Chair and Panelist, the 2 nd Annual Microenterprise Conference, Brigham Young University, March 26, 1999.

Restoring Gospel Socio-Economic Principles in East Africa. Presentation to LDS East African Leaders, Nairobi, Kenya, February 13, 1999.

Village Banking as the Path to National Development. Speech at the General Assembly of La Caisse Villageouise Jkseme. With co-presenter Alpha Konare, President of the Republic of Mali, West Africa, January 2, 1999.

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The Mormon View of Business and Economics: Integrating the Spiritual and Temporal. Presentation at the International Conference on Business and Consciousness, Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, November 7-14, 1998.

Working Toward Zion in the 21st Century. Paper presented at the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion Annual Meeting, Montreal, Canada, November 6-9, 1998.

Combating Poverty Through OD in the Trenches: Strategies for the Third World. Paper presented at the 18th OD World Congress, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland, July 14-17, 1998.

Indicators for NGO Quality Assessment and Impact Evaluation. Workshop Leader, Credit with Education-Freedom from Hunger Symposium, Newark, NJ: June 28-30, 1998.

Strategic Planning for 100 Million of the World’s Poorest Families: An Institutional Action Plan. Microcredit Summit of Councils, New York City, June 25-27, 1998 (with Gary Woller).

E4 Organizations. Keynote presentation to the American Society for Quality, 5 th Annual Conference, Boise, Idaho, May 20-22, 1998.

The International Feminization of Poverty. Paper presented at a University of Utah Symposium on Women and Poverty, Salt Lake City, April 9, 1998.

How to Work Toward Zion. Presentation at Utah Valley Business Roundtable, Provo, January 18, 1998.

New Paradigm Thinking About Values, Spirit, and Management. Presentation at the Third Annual Conference on Business and Spirituality, Puerto Vallerta, Mexico, November 12-14, 1997.

Doing Business in the Philippines. Presentation to Korean managers of Ton Yang Group, Inc. on Globalization Strategies. Also conducted workshop on Employee Empowerment, November 3-23, 1997.

Self-Reliance and Temporal Well-being: Indigenous Latter-day Saints in the Isles of the Pacific. Paper read at a conference, “Pioneering in the Pacific,” Laie, Hawaii, October 7-11, 1997.

OD as Third World Development: Microenterprise and Poverty Lending for the Poor. Paper presented at the International Association of Management, Montreal, Canada, August 9, 1997.

Organizational Praxis: Integrating Theory and Hands-On Experience. Paper presented at the Association of Management, Montreal, Canada, August 6, 1997.

Teach a Woman to Fish and You Feed a Whole Village. Presentation to Mentores Empresariales, Guatemala City, Guatemala, May 20, 1997.

The New Mexican Revolution: Bringing the Marginalized, Indigenous Poor into the Economy of Mexico. Presentation to Fundacion Dignidad, Mexico City, Mexico, May 15, 1997.

Development from the Bottom Up: A Tough Love Approach Rather than Top Down Charity. Comments at the World Microcredit Summit, Africa Section. Washington, D.C., February 2-4, 1997.

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U.S. Labor History and Industrial Relations Today. Workshop for Korean executives from Hyundai Heavy Industries Group, November 15, 1996.

Managing Effective Accounting Teams. Presentation at Deloitte Touche Academic Conference, Colorado Springs, CO: August 2-3, 1996.

High Performance/High Commitment Firms. Seminar for 18 Korean executives of Lucky Goldstar Corp., July 15-18, 1996.

New Values and Organizations for the 21st Century: Examples from the United Order. Presentation to the Marriott School Annual Management Conference, June 20, 1996 (with James W. Lucas).

Labor Ownership of Capital: The Road Ahead. Presentation to the worker boards of directors, The Mondragon Cooperative Corporation, Mondragon, Spain, May 25, 1996.

The Workers’ Cooperative Movement in the 21st Century. Paper read at CIRIEC Conference at Lisbon, Portugal, May 20-22, 1996.

New Organizational Assumptions and Values for Global Restructuring. Presentation at the World Business Academy Conference, Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada, May 2-5, 1996.

Microcredit for the Poor: Job Creation, Not Charity. Panelist at International Symposium on Third World Development, Michigan Law and Development Society, University of Michigan School of Law, Ann Arbor, MI: March 15-17, 1996 (panel with Muhammad Yunus, President of Grameen Bank, Sam Daley-Harris, Founder & CEO, Results International).

De-elitizing the Technical Advisors: Creating North/South Partnerships with the Poor. Presentation at NGO Development Symposium, The United Nations, New York City, February 16, 1996.

Grassroots Development Tactics and Village Sustainability. Presentation to Peace Corps, government officials and NGO professionals, Mali, West Africa, December 18, 1995.

Business and Transforming the Global Agenda. Presentation at the First International Conference on Spirituality and Blessings, Mazatlan, Mexico, November 11-18, 1995.

Transition Strategies for Privatization. Presentation to state-owned enterprises in Minsk, Belarus, August 3, 1995.

Small Business Challenges in Post-Communist Society. Speech to entrepreneurs and new capitalists, Moscow, Russia, July 31, 1995.

Indigenous Management: Microenterprise in the Philippines. Paper read at Western Social Sciences Association (Economics Section), Oakland, CA: April 26-30, 1995.

Neither Capitalism Nor Socialism: Mormon Pioneer Values as a Third Alternative. Paper read at Western Social Sciences Association (History Section). Oakland, CA: April 26-30, 1995.

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Economic Challenges in Latin America. Speech at Latin American Business Strategies Conference, Salt Lake City, Utah, April 4, 1995.

Conscience and Community: Steel Industry Ethics. Paper read at the Association for Practical and Professional Ethics, Crystal City, Virginia, March 2-5, 1995.

Competition vs. Caring: Toward the Soul of a Business. Paper read at the 6 th National Conference on Ethics in America. Long Beach, CA: February 22-24, 1995.

The Politics of Reform in Latin America: The Critical Role of NGOs in Development. Presentation at International Conference on Third World Development, Antigua, Guatemala, November 14-15, 1994.

Managing Change. Presentation to the Leadership Academy for Utah College Administrators, University of Utah campus, Salt Lake City, Utah, July 11, 1994.

The Industrial Revolution and the Rise of Mormonism: Economic Compatibilities and Contrasts. Paper read at the Mormon History Association's 29th Annual Meeting, Park City, Utah, May 19-22, 1994.

Organizational Values, Systems and Structures: Roots of the Early Mormon Economy. Paper presented at the Utah Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters, Weber State University, Ogden, Utah, May 13, 1994.

Micro Entrepreneurship: Third World Small Business Strategies. Presentation to the Entrepreneur/Corporate Founders Conference, Provo, Utah, April 1, 1994.

Organizational Innovation and Transformation. Presentation to Chilean business executives and public-sector managers, Santiago, Chile, March 3, 1994.

From the Informal Economy to a Cooperative Business Sector: Tactics for Change. Paper read at conference of NGOs, PVOs and development agencies, Organization of the American States (OAS), Santiago, Chile, February 28, 1994.

Grassroots Tools for Empowering the Poor: Village Banking Models. Speech to Mindanao City Council, bankers and entrepreneurs. Davao, the Philippines, January 20, 1994.

Alternative Paradigms for Third World Development: Participatory Strategies for Economic Change. Presentation to Visayas Enterprise Foundation, Cebu City, the Philippines, January 19, 1994.

From the Informal Economy to Producer Cooperatives: The San Miguel Case. Presentation to non-profit groups, educators, and policy-makers, Manila, the Philippines, January 17, 1994.

Empowerment Strategies for Organizational Restructuring: U.S. and International Cases. Presentation to National Conference on Organizational Behavior, October 20-22, 1993.

Strategies for Organizational Perestroika. Presentation at the National Conference on Corporate Redesign. Washington, D.C., June 16-18, 1993.

25

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Strengthening the Informal Economy. Presentation at the University of the West Indies. Kingston, Jamaica, April 30, 1993.

Terra Incognita: From Command Economy to Economic Democracy in the CIS. Paper read at the Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics, New York City, March 26-28, 1993.

Reforming the World. Keynote speaker at BYU Association of Women. January 23, 1993.

New Economic Imperatives. Speech at Humbolt University, Berlin, Germany, November 29, 1992.

Privatization and Entrepreneurship Methods. Presentation to Solidarnosc Trade Union Officials, Gdansk, Poland, November 20, 1992.

Eastern European Alternatives for Privatization and Organizational Restructuring. International Conference, Warsaw, Poland, October 23-24, 1992.

New Mormon Experiments Toward Zion: Varieties of the Old World Order. Paper read at the National Communal Studies Association. Nauvoo, Illinois, October 14-16, 1992.

Grassroots Development in the Philippines Context. Presentation to the International Joint Action Council, Salt Lake City, Utah, October, 1992.

Privatization Tactics Through Worker Buyouts. International Business School, Warsaw, Poland, July 19-20, 1992.

Strategies for National Reconstruction: OD and Organizational Economics. 12th OD World Congress, Palanga, Lithuania, July 14-18, 1992.

Organizational Change Interventions, Team Building, and Socio-Technical Innovations in Organizational Behavior. Workshop at Vilnius University, Lithuania, July 12, 1992.

Privatization Strategies and the Process of Democratization. Karl Marx Economics University, Minsk, Belarussia, July 6-7, 1992.

The Redesign of Education: New Paradigms and Practices. Paper read at the Approaching a School in Zion Symposium, College of Education, BYU, March 19-20, 1992.

Latin America's Informal Economy. Presentation to Management Society, Sao Paulo, Brazil, Dec. 12, 1991.

Organizational Transformation: Managerial Trends toward the Year 2000. Speech to Brazilian bankers and executives, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, December 11, 1991.

Economic Democracy in the Next Millennium: Utopia, Fantasy or Mere Impossibility? Society for Utopian Studies, Las Vegas, Nevada, November 7-9, 1991.

Development of OB/HR Professionals. Presentation at OD Network Annual Conference, Long Beach, California, October 28-29, 1991.

26

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A New Framework For Industrial Relations: From Confrontation to Reconciliation. European Group for Organization Studies (EGOS), Vienna, Austria, July 15-17, 1991.

Industrial Praxis: The Micro Organization. Presentation at the 10th Annual Organizational Behavior Teaching Conference, Western Washington University, Bellingham, Washington. June 26-29, 1991.

A Trickle Up Theory of Economic Development: The Mondragon System of Spain. Department of Economics Seminar for Faculty and Doctoral Students, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, May 16, 1991.

Democracy and Justice: Independence and Economic Reform in Eastern Europe. Helsinki School of Economics, Finland, May 10, 1991.

Workers' Participation in Corporate Governance: EC '92 Implications. Presentation at Quality of Working Life Conference, Stockholm, Sweden, May 8-9, 1991.

Linking Technology and Entrepreneurship. Paper presented at the International Conference on Technology and Education, Toronto, Canada, May 3 (with Chris Meek).

Meta Economics: Toward a Theory of Equality and Empowerment. American University, Washington, D.C. April 20, 1991.

Between Communism and Capitalism: Options for the USSR. Tenth International Conference on ESOPs. Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, April 7, 1991.

Capitalism With A Human Face: Social Responsibility in the Steel Industry. Paper read at the International Association of Business and Society, March 22-24, 1991.

The Underground Economy of the Third World. Presentation at conference on economic development, Manila, Philippines, December 8-9, 1990.

Privatization and Economic Reform. Presentation to the Ministry of Labor of the USSR, Moscow, August 29, 1990.

Proactive Alternatives to Plant Shutdowns. U.S. Department of Labor Conference on Economic Dislocation. Denver, Colorado, February 21, 1990.

Third World Strategies Toward Zion. Pacific Communal Studies Association, Provo, Utah, May 4-5, 1990.

The New Global Marketplace. International Business Seminars presented in Denver, Colorado, and Dallas, Texas, April 1990.

Self Employment Enterprise in the Philippines. LDS Church Headquarters presentation, November 15, 1990.

Mormons and Wealth: Dancing the Lambada with Babylon. Paper read at Sunstone Symposium, Salt Lake City, Utah, August 22-25, 1990.

27

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Frontier Development Strategies: Maquiladora or the Grassroots? United Nations Conference on Population and Development. Ciudad Juarez/El Paso, December 1-2, 1989.

Teaching the Social Responsibility of Business. Kemper Foundation Ethics Conference, BYU, November 2-3, 1989.

Communal Economics: Rural and Urban. Sixteenth Annual Historic Communal Societies Conference, Yankton, South Dakota, October 5-7, 1989.

Anticipatory Organizational Socialization (and) Employee Ownership (with Joseph Vittoria, CEO, Avis Co.). Two papers presented at the National Academy of Management, Washington, D.C., August 14-16, 1989.

Crooks, Con-Artists, and Crackpots: Business (Un)Ethics. Sunstone Symposium, Salt Lake City, Utah, August 24, 1989.

Labor Involvement in Corporate Strategy: U.S. Co-determination. European Group for Organizational Studies, Berlin, West Germany, July 11-14, 1989.

Government Policies and Economic Dislocation. U.S. Department of Labor Conference, Helena, Montana, March 15-16, 1989.

Expanding and Enlarging Graduate Business Education. Speech at Marriott School Outstanding Faculty Banquet, BYU, March, 1989.

Problems and Potential of Developing the Underground Economy. Seminar presentation in Manila, the Philippines, January 19, 1989.

Ideology and Practice: The Basque Cooperative Community. Paper presented at the International Communal Studies Association, Edinburgh, Scotland, July 18-21, 1988.

Making America Competitive. Paper presented at the Pacific Forum, School of Business Administration, University of Hawaii, Honolulu, Hawaii, April 22, 1988.

Cooperatives and the Social Economy. Comments at the 2nd World Basque Congress, Bilbao, Spain, October 19-24, 1987.

Saving Jobs Through Employee Ownership. Paper at the 6th National Conference on Employee Ownership and Participation, Los Angeles, CA: March 26-28, 1987.

Asian Industrial Relations: From Organizational Bureaucracy to Organizational Democracy. 1st Asian Congress of Industrial Relations, Singapore, February 9-11, 1987.

A Suit and a Briefcase: Children's Images of Managers. Presentation at the Academy of Management, Chicago, Illinois, August 13-16, 1986.

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Foreign Trade and Industrial Disintegration. Panelist at "Save American Industry and Jobs Day," a nationwide campaign, Orem, Utah, June 21, 1986 (with Senator Orrin Hatch and Senator Jake Garn).

Communities in Crisis. Presentation at Congressional hearings on industrial policy for the steel industry, Washington, D.C., June 17, 1986.

Cultural Chic: Corporate Paternalism's `New Look'. Paper read at the Utah Academy of Arts, Sciences and Letters, Cedar City, Utah, May 2, 1986 (with Rob Page).

Fugitive Industry: Plant Closings and Women Workers. Paper read at Women's Studies section, Western Social Sciences Association, Reno, Nevada, April 25, 1986.

Social Science in Non-White Cultures: The Politics of Change. Chaired symposium and made a presentation, A Participatory Approach to Organization Building in Mexico: Grassroots Empowerment. Western Social Science Association, Reno, Nevada, April 24, 1986.

Brave New Workplace. Outstanding Teacher of the Year, College Showcase speech to graduating students at Brigham Young University, April 17, 1986.

Two Faces of the Economy. Keynote speech at the Utah Federation of Democratic Women's Convention, Salt Lake City, April 12, 1986.

Gagging on the Truth: Ethics and Profits at U.S. Steel. Speech at the University of Utah, February 18, 1986.

Plant Closings and Labor's Strategic Options. Speech at Utah State AFL-CIO Executive Council, Salt Lake City, November 26, 1985.

Challenges Facing Unions:  The Next Decade.  Speech at the U.S. Department of Labor, Washington, D.C., October 31, 1985.

Managing Into Oblivion:  Crises in the Steel Industry.  Academy of Management Meetings, San Diego, California, August 11, 1985.

Mormon Megatrends.  Panelist at Sunstone Symposium, Salt Lake City, Utah, August 23, 1985.

Difficulties in Attempting to Launch Self-Managed Firms in the United States.  Paper presented at the 4th International Conference on the Economics of Self-Management, Liege, Belgium, July 15-17, 1985.

Consulting for 2nd Order Change.  Paper read at Research Committee 10 of the International Sociological Association, Osnabruck, West Germany, July 5-9, 1985.

Crisis in the Steel Industry.  Discussant at meetings of the U.S. Department of Labor and the United Steelworkers of America, Houston, Texas, June 7-8, 1985. 

Worker Participation in Employee-Owned Companies.  Fourth Annual Conference on Employee Ownership, San Francisco, California, April 25-27, 1985.

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Overthrowing Victorian Psychology.  Western Psychological Association, San Jose, California, April 20-21, 1985.

In the Boardroom--Common Themes Emerging from Labor's Involvement in Stock Ownership and Corporate Governance.  Industrial Relations Research Association, Detroit, Michigan, April 17-19, 1985.

Eliminating Elitism in OD Practice.  Paper at plenary session of the 4th International Congress on OD, Oaxtepec, Mexico, March 5-8, 1985.

Berkeley Conference on Industrial Relations.  Discussant at plenary session, University of California, Berkeley, California, February 22-23, 1985.

Shared Governance in Corporate America.  Speech co-sponsored by the Sidney Harman Lecture Series and Program on Technology and Public Policy.  Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, December 6, 1984.

A Progressive Agenda for Labor in the 1980s.  Speech at the United Auto Workers' Eastern Conference.  Atlantic City, New Jersey, December 5, 1984.

Problems and Complexities With Implementing Participation in the Employee-Owned Firm.  Paper read at the National Employee Ownership and Participation Conference for Educators.  Greensboro, North Carolina, October 12-14, 1984 (with Chris Meek).

Worker Directors and Corporate Governance.  Organized and chaired symposium at the National Academy of Management annual meeting.  Also presented papers at other sessions entitled, "Consulting With a Union Perspective" and "Democratizing the Economy Through Worker Ownership."  Boston, Massachusetts, August 12-15, 1984.

The Relevance of Contemporary Economic Democracy Strategies to Early Mormonism.  Presentation at the 6th Annual Sunstone Theological Symposium.  Salt Lake City, Utah, August 23-25, 1984.

Employee Ownership:  A Critique.  Speech at the Dardon Business School, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, April 26, 1984.

Participatory Research and Economic Democracy in the '80s:  Experience from the U.S. Paper read at the CIRCOM 4th International Symposium, Afro-Asian Institute, Tel Aviv, Israel, April 8-12, 1984.

Ejido Collective Movements in Latin America.  Panelist at the Histadrut Workers' College, Tel Aviv, Israel, April 9, 1984.

Coping with Unemployment and Dislocated Workers Through Employee Buyouts.  Presentation to the National Conference of State Legislatures, Salt Lake City, Utah, March 23-24, 1984.

From Absentee Ownership to Worker-Owned Firms.  Paper read at the Eastern Sociological Association, Boston, Massachusetts, March 18-20, 1984 (with Chris Meek, Boston College).

30

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Collective Bargaining and U.S. Industrial Democracy.  Paper read at an international workshop, Future Perspectives of Economic and Industrial Democracy, Yugoslavia Center for Theory and Practice of Self-Management, Dubrovnik, Yugoslavia, October 5-8, 1983.

Cooperative Movements in the United States:  The Third Stage.  Paper read at the II World Conference on Industrial Cooperatives, Warsaw, Poland, October 3, 1983.

Evidence on Worker Buyouts.  Presentation at the Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, November 28, 1983.

Approaches to Democratic Management.  Workshop conducted at the annual meeting of North American Students of Cooperation (NASCO), Ann Arbor, Michigan, November 11-13, 1983.

Worker Cooperatives and Community Empowerment.  Presentation at Community Services Conference, Antioch College, Yellow Springs, Ohio, September 16-18, 1983.

Industrial Psychology and the Labor Movement:  New Modes of Collaboration.  Presentation at the Rocky Mountain Psychological Association, Snowbird, Utah, April 27-30, 1983.

Learning from Failures in Workers' Participation.  Organizer and speaker at annual conference of the Association for Workplace Democracy, Denver, Colorado, April 8-9, 1983.

Beyond Quality Circles: Quality of Working Life Frameworks.  Conducted symposium and read a paper at the Western Academy of Management, Santa Barbara, California, March 24-26, 1983.

Bargaining for Power:  Labor Demands in Times of Economic Crisis.  Paper read at the Industrial Relations Research Association.  Honolulu, Hawaii, March 16-18, 1983.

Collective Bargaining:  Concessions or Control?  Paper presented at the Allied Social Sciences Association, New York City, December 28-30, 1982.

Systems of Organizational Governance and Work Redesign.  Presentation at Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, November 1, 1982.

The Future of Employee Ownership and Labor/Management Cooperation.  Panelist at Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, October 28-29, 1982.

Absentee Ownership and Organizational Renewal.  Paper presented at Colloquium on Community Research, Society for the Study of Social Problems, San Francisco, California, September 6, 1982.

Trends Toward Economic Fascism.  Paper read at the American Political Science Association, Denver, Colorado, September 5, 1982.

Worker Takeover of a General Motors Plant:  Toward A Robin Hood Theory of Change.  Presented paper and served as rapporteur at the Third International Conference of the International Association for the Economics of Self-Management, College of the Third World, Mexico City, August 23-25, 1982.

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Collective Power and Liberation of Work.  Paper presented at the Tenth World Congress, International Sociological Association, Mexico City, August 16-20, 1982.

Industrial Decline and the Rise of Employee Ownership.  Academy of Management, New York City, August 16, 1982 (with Chris Meek, Boston College).

Worker Ownership:  An Expanding Alternative in the Global Village.  Paper read at the Society for International Development, Baltimore, Maryland, July 18-22, 1982.

The Empowerment of Labor.  Speech to the United Auto Workers, Clark, New Jersey, June 13, 1982.

Socio-Economic Transformation Through the Rise of Peoples' Enterprises.  Paper read at the Caribbean Studies Association, Kingston, Jamaica, May 26-29, 1982.

Resisting Economic Concentration Through Worker Insurrection.  Paper read at the annual meeting of the Western Social Science Association (Economics Section), Denver, Colorado, April 23, 1982.

Ownership and Democratization of the Workplace.  Presentation at the John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, April 17, 1982.

Rath Packing Company:  Participative Management in a Worker-Owned Firm.  Speech to the U.S. Department of Labor, Washington, D.C., April 15, 1982.

Toward a Participatory Sociology:  A Case of Workers' Control in Industry.  Paper presented at the Midwest Sociological Society, Des Moines, Iowa, April 7-9, 1982.

Participation and Power in the Employee-Owned Firm.  Read paper and chaired symposium organized for the Western Academy of Management, Colorado Springs, Colorado, April 1-3, 1982.

The Union Role in Employee Ownership.  Presentation at a conference on jobs and unemployment for the City of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, March 12-13, 1982.

Worker Ownership of Business:  Strategies and Examples.  Organizer and chair of panel at the International Conference on Economic Dislocation, Los Angeles, California, November 6-7, 1981.

Attitudinal Dispositions Toward Technology and Religiosity.  Paper read at the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion, Baltimore, Maryland, October, 29-30, 1981.

North American Cases of Employee Ownership:  Experiences and Problems.  Panelist at conference sponsored by the International Council for the Quality of Working Life, Toronto, Canada, August 31-September 3, 1981.

The Law of Consecration:  Toward a Theology of Participation and Economic Justice.  Paper read at the Sunstone Theological Symposium, Salt Lake City, Utah, August 28, 1981 (with J.H. Stoddard). 

A Case of Worker Ownership, Participation and Control.  Paper presented at the American Sociological Association, Toronto, Canada, August 24-27, 1981.

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Labor Issues in Communist and Socialist Nations.  Organizer and Chair of thematic session at the Society for the Study of Social Problems, Toronto, Canada, August 22, 1981.

Developing a Framework for Union Analysis of Participation.  Presentation at a conference on Extending Workplace Democracy, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, June 31, 1981.

Toward an Advocacy Model of Teaching OB.  Presentation at the Eighth Annual Organizational Behavior Teaching Conference, Harvard Business School, Cambridge, Massachusetts, June 16-19, 1981 (with Jim Driscoll, MIT).

Peasants, Psychology, and Autogestion:  Social Transformation in Latin America.  Paper read at the XVIII Interamerican Congress of Psychology, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, June 23-26, 1981.

Ownership, Participation, and the Quality of Working Life.  Presentation at the John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, June 10, 1981.

Trends in Workplace Reform. Speech to the Business Roundtable, Waterloo, Iowa, February 25, 1981.

Workers' Control and Economic Revitalization. Paper presented at the European Group for Organization Studies (EGOS), Glasgow, Scotland, March 29-April 2, 1981.

The Rise of a Peoples' Economics: Third World Perspectives. Organizer and Moderator of a Symposium at the Fifth National Conference, "Toward the 21st Century," Association for Self-Management, Washington, D.C., November 20-23, 1980.

The Potential for a Third Economic Sector. Presentation at the annual meeting of the Caucus for a New Political Science, Institute for Policy Studies, Washington, D.C., August 20-31, 1980.

Beyond Traditional Organizational Reform to Workers' Self-Determination. Paper read at the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, New York City, August 27-28, 1980.

Tactical Counter-Resistance to Economic Oppression: Worker/Community Responses to Industrial Plant Shutdowns. Paper presented at the 30th meeting of the Society for the Study of Social Problems, New York City, August 23-26, 1980.

Change in Industrial Settings: Inklings of Economic Democracy in the United States. Paper read at the Second International Conference on the Economics of Workers' Self-Management. Also served as rapporteur for a symposium on Workers' Control in Eastern Europe, Istanbul, Turkey, July 16-19, 1980.

Workers' Self-Determination and the Transformation of Capitalism. Political Science lecture at the University of Belgrade, Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, July 14, 1980.

Recent Developments in U.S. Workers' Participation. Presentation at a seminar, Work Research Institute, Oslo, Norway, July 11, 1980.

Job Redesign. Presentation to industrial psychology faculty, Karl Marx University, Leipzig, German Democratic Republic (East), July 9, 1980.

33

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Socio-Technical Systems in New Industrial Plants: Processes and Outcomes of Starting from Scratch. Paper read at the XXII International Congress of Psychology, Leipzig, German Democratic Republic, July 6-12, 1980.

The Care and Feeding of Multinationals. Presentation at the Second International Conference on Self-Management and Participation in Latin America and the Caribbean, San Jose, Costa Rica, June 23-26, 1980.

The Essentials of Labor-Management Cooperation. Panel member at the Institute for Economic Democracy and Community Development, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, June 9-13, 1980.

Worker/Community Ownership of Steel. Presentation at the Great Lakes Conference on Plant Shutdowns, Youngstown, Ohio, June 7, 1980 (with Staughton Lynd, Yale University).

Workplace Democracy. Presentation at the Institute of Labor and Industrial Relations, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, May 20, 1980.

The Prospects of Employee Ownership. Presentation at the Sixth Annual Conference on Labor-Management Cooperation: "Directions for the Future," Jamestown, New York, May 22-23, 1980 (with William Foote Whyte, Cornell University).

Pain, Pathos, and Paranoia in the Classroom. Paper presented at the Midwest Sociological Society, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, April 3-5, 1980 (with David Ulrich, UCLA).

Forms of Employee Ownership and Worker's Control. Paper read at the annual meeting of the Western Academy of Management, Phoenix, Arizona, March 28-29, 1980.

The Role of Labor and Management in the Socio-Economic Renewal of Communities. Paper presented at the Third Annual Conference on Small Cities, University of Wisconsin, Steven's Point, Wisconsin, March 26-27, 1980.

The Emerging Activist in Sociology. Paper read at the 10th Annual Alpha Kappa Delta Research Symposium, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia, February 14-16, 1980.

Labor Alternatives to Industrial Plant Shutdowns. Panel member at a National Conference on the Future of the American Labor Movement, "1980s: Plight or Prosperity?" Ann Arbor, Michigan, January 18-19, 1980.

Worker Co-ops: Problems and Potential. Speaker and panel moderator at the annual conference of the North American Students of Cooperation (NASCO), Ann Arbor, Michigan, October 19-21, 1979.

An Appraisal of Worker-Owned Firms in the United States. Paper read at the Symposium on Workers' Participation, 5th World Congress, International Industrial Relations Association, Paris, France, September 3-7, 1979.

Transitions in Zion: A Typology of Mormon Women Today. Paper presented at the American Psychological Association, New York, September 2, 1979.

34

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We've Always Done It This Way: The Lucas Aerospace Shop Stewards Committee. Panel member at session on Workers' Self-Determination, American Political Science Association, Washington, D.C., August 30-September 1, 1979.

Social Scientists: Entrepreneurs or Observers in the Genesis of Social Problems? Paper read at the American Sociological Association, Boston, Massachusetts, August 27-29, 1979.

Growing Kids, Corn and Change Agents: The Immorality of Teaching OB. Presentation at the OB Teaching Conference, Cincinnati, Ohio, June 20-23, 1979 (with J.B. Ritchie).

Self-Management in Worker-Owned Cooperatives. Panel member at Conference on Urban Alternatives, Indianapolis, Indiana, April 20-21, 1979.

Innovations in Productivity. Speech to Directors of Labor Relations Conference, Dearborn, Michigan, March 13, 1979.

Perceptions of Technology and Religious Values. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Houston, Texas, January 3-8, 1979 (with Todd Britsch).

Organizational Development in Community Settings: Fit or Misfit? Paper presented at the American Psychological Association, Toronto, Canada, August 28-30, 1978.

Consulting with Conflicting Parties: A Method for Achieving Mixed Results. Paper read at the National Academy of Management Meeting, San Francisco, California, August 10-12, 1978.

Management and Labor Cooperation: The Muskegon Michigan Case. Paper read at the Canadian Department of Labor Conference on Community Economic Issues, Montreal, Canada, May 17, 1978.

The Immorality of OD Practice. Paper presented to the OD Institute Annual Conference, Waldenwoods, Michigan, May 3-5, 1978.

The Ethnocentricity of Organizational Theory. Paper read at the section on Latin American Studies, Western Social Science Association, April 28, 1978.

Dilemmas of Social Research: Ethics, Ideology and Political Intervention. Paper presented to the section on Social Psychology, Western Social Science Association, April 27, 1978.

Luddities vs. Brave New World: Attitudes Toward Technological Innovations. Paper read at the Western Social Science Association, April 27, 1978 (with Taggart Frost).

A Process for Social Change: Applications of Sociology in a Field Experiment. Paper read at the Pacific Sociological Association, Spokane, Washington, April 13-15, 1978.

Organizational Behavior and Industrial Relations. Paper presented at Western Division of the Academy of Management annual meetings, Sacramento, California, March 17, 1978.

35

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A Process for Addressing Social Issues: Management and Labor Self-Interests and Mutual Objectives. Paper read at the 20th Southwest Academy of Management, Dallas, Texas, March 10, 1978.

Organizing for Action. Speech to the Gray Panthers of Utah County, Provo, Utah, February 18, 1978.

OD Involving Labor and Management: A Field Experiment and Its Implications. Paper read at BYU sponsored conference: "What's New in OD," January 30-31, 1978.

Society in Transition: The Impact of Technology (perceptions of 1984 or a millennium). Paper read at the Utah Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters, Salt Lake City, Utah, December 2, 1977.

The Unread College Graduate and the Need for More Literate Power-Brokers. Paper presented at the National Association of School Principals, Salt Lake City, November 11, 1977.

Instrumented Techniques for Organizational Diagnosis. Seminar for American Society of Training and Development participants in San Francisco, California, August 30, 1977.

Men, Women and Their Bases of Power. Presentation to Utah Consortium for Women in Higher Education, Cedar City, Utah, July 19, 1977.

Teaching Organizational Design: Assumptions, Objectives and Learning Processes. Paper delivered at the OB Teaching Conference, Toronto, Canada, May 16-18, 1977.

Survey Data Collection Methodologies. Seminar for American Society of Personnel Administrators participants, Salt Lake City, Utah, April 19, 1977.

Personal Renewal: The Administrator's Dilemma. Speech to the American College of Hospital Administrators, February 2, 1977.

The Utilization of Conflict. Presentation to the University of Utah Women's Center, November 22, 1976.

Seminar participant, UCLA Conference on Business and Society, Los Angeles, California, July 25-August 4, 1976.

The Social Environment of Organizations. Paper read at the Conference on Organization/Environment Issues. Sao Paulo, Brazil, Getulio Vargas Foundation, 1975.

RESEARCH

Major research projects and funding sources are listed below:

Kellogg Foundation--Community Organizational Development, 1971.Ford Foundation--Cross Cultural Research in Latin America, 1974.American Psychological Association--Travel Funds to Europe and the Caribbean, 1980-81.Economic Development Administration--$40,000 grant to research worker-ownership, 1980-81.British Social Science Research Council--U.S. Representative to meetings of the European

Group for Organizational Studies (EGOS), 1981.

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Federal Mediation and Conciliation Services--$24,000 to provide technical assistance in labor/management cooperation, 1981-82.

American Sociological Association--Travel Grant, 1982.The German Marshall Fund--on European industrial cooperatives, Summer 1983.West German Ministry of Labor Grant, Summer 1985.Center for International Business and Economic Research, Eastern Europe, 1992.David M. Kennedy Center, Russian Research Grant, 1992-94.Marriott School, BYU Development of Western China, $30,000 during 2000-2001.Global Management Center, Guatemalan Microfinance Impacts Study, $5000 in 2003.FINCA International, developing research instruments to assess the impacts of microcredit on

family well-being, mentoring 16 BYU students doing field studies in 16 countries of Latin America, former USSR, and Africa, $56,000, 1998-2004.

Global research on microcredit impacts, Marriott School funding, 2002-2006.

Short term projects include organizational consulting, management training, design and administration of organizational surveys, questionnaires, development and conducting of in-depth interviews, and survey feedback to such organizations as the University of Michigan and its hospital complex; AFL-CIO and UAW Labor unions; Public Technology, Inc., Washington, D.C.; Salt Lake County Department of Social Services; and firms like Lever Brothers, New York; Alcoa Aluminum, Lafayette, Indiana; General Motors--Assembly Division, Atlanta, GA; Olin Corporation, Covington, Indiana; Schering Chemical Co., Rio de Janeiro; Honeywell Inc., Minneapolis, MN; Natter Manufacturing Co., Temple City, CA; VSI Hardware Industries, Los Angeles, CA; American Mold Engineering, Charlevoix, MI; Tubing Sealcap Co., Azusa, CA; Fairchild Industries, Washington, D.C.; Cincinnati – Millicron, Detroit, MI; and the Oil Division of Rohm and Haas Corporation and the OCAW Union, Houston, TX.

CORPORATE PROJECTS

Long term action research and consulting work includes the following:

Institute for Social Research--Study design, implementation, data collection, feedback, and the establishing of a systematic problem-solving capability for major sectors of the community of Battle Creek, Michigan (1971-72).

National Industrial Mission--Design and development of an approach to combat economic depression and reduce labor/management conflict with the broad objective of generating economic and social change in Muskegon, Michigan (1972-73).

Rensis Likert Associates, Inc.--Consultant in management firm working with a variety of clients, having primary responsibility for research design, survey feedback, and ongoing organizational development work with General Motors Division of Fisher Body, Grand Rapids, Michigan (1973-74).

Arthur D. Little, Inc.--Consulting and interview methodology in researching the viability of corporate decentralization for Microlite, S.A. headquartered in Sao Paulo, Brazil. Also engaged in managerial problems at different plant sites in Guarulhos and Recife, Brazil to institute systems of performance evaluation, career development, and succession planning (1975-79).

VSI Corporation-- Consultant to CEO and top management operating committee in Pasadena, California, on problems of strategic planning, management development, career planning, and administrative restructuring corporate-wide (1976-79).

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DME Co.--Consulting activity dealing with organizational structure and participative management approaches at plants in New Jersey, California, and Illinois (1977-85).

Clark Equipment Co.--Organizational research and consultant to labor/management quality of work project in Michigan of the International Truck Division with company management and the Allied Industrial Workers of America, Local No. 939 (1978-80).

Rath Packing Co.--Assisting top executives, the board of directors, and the 1800-member Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butcher Workmen, Local 46, in their efforts to buy the company, organize cells of workers' councils, and establish a workers' board of directors. Rath was an important and unusual case because the union, in order to save the firm and their members' jobs, negotiated the creation of both employee ownership and control through the 3000 employee purchase of 60% of the firm's stock and the placement of this stock in an unusual Employee Stock Ownership Trust (ESOT) which operated on the cooperative principle of "one-person-one-vote." The trustees were elected by the employees, and they, in turn, were responsible for appointing ten of the company's sixteen directors. The action research effort flowed from a joint union-management committee which operated under the board. A wide variety of innovative problem solving activities were created which set a precedent for subsequent "democratic buyouts" in North America. These innovations included a joint labor-management corporate planning team and numerous departmental and ad hoc problem solving teams (1979-83).

State of Colorado--Providing technical assistance to the Governor's Office in a venture to create a new worker-owned enterprise in Pueblo jointly with 600 members of the United Food and Commercial Workers Union, Local 565 (1981).

Regional Industrial Democracy Development--Linking various efforts around the U.S. in moving toward more worker participation and labor-managed projects including the Jamestown, New York Labor/Management Committee; the Industrial Cooperative Association in Cambridge, Massachusetts; The Association for Self-Management in Washington, D,C.; and the Program on New Systems of Work and Participation, New York State School of Labor and Industrial Relations, Cornell University (1980-81).

John Morrell Co.--Technical assistance to the Estherville, Iowa, operation for management and Local 79, UFCW as they engaged in a cooperative process for improving production, quality of working life, and socio-technical changes (1981).

Countering Plant Shutdowns--Consulting with various groups attempting to make the transition to employee ownership. Clients include United Independent Taxi Drivers, a 200 member cooperative in Los Angeles; GMW Trucking, an ESOP firm headquartered in Minneapolis, Minnesota; U.S. Steel workers in Youngstown, Ohio; The New York Daily News; Continental Airlines in Los Angeles, California; Firestone Rubber Workers in Dayton, Ohio (1981-82).

State Government Assistance in Economic Development--Helping various regions around the country combat the problems of economic recession and dislocation. Service was rendered to the state legislature of Pennsylvania, Job Service of Utah, Colorado Department of Labor and Employment, Department of Economic and Business Planning of the State of California (1981-83).

Hyatt Clark Industries--Consulting with management and UAW Local 736 leaders in the process of purchasing a bearing plant from General Motors, creating improved productivity and a democratic

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approach to decision-making from the shopfloor to the boardroom. This strategy saved over a thousand autoworker jobs and stabilized the Clark, New Jersey area's economy, becoming a prototype for other successful worker takeovers such as Weirton Steel in West Virginia (1981-85).

Coping with Utah Economic Erosion--Mounting a campaign to preserve jobs and assist communities in Central Utah, including NRP, the rubberworkers' union, and the City of Nephi; management and the ironworkers at McNally Steel; and the Save Geneva Coalition, local governments, steelworkers, and business groups in Utah Valley (1984-85); action research with groups of managers attempting to combat major plant closings, including Signetics Corp. (Orem), Hiller Book Binding (Salt Lake City), National Semi Conductor (West Jordan) and Unysis Corp. (Salt Lake City), (1991-93).

Utah Small Business Development Center, Brigham Young University Office--Responsible for establishing and directing the development and delivery of training and consulting services to small companies and to individuals interested in starting businesses within the region. These services were provided to strengthen and stimulate economic development through small business. The Center was funded by the Small Business Administration of the U.S. Department of Commerce, Utah State Government and Brigham Young University. Staff included an assistant director, a secretary and a part-time graduate assistant staff consultant. A number of graduate students and some undergraduates also assisted the center by consulting on a variety of projects (1985-86).

NGO DEVELOPMENT PROJECTS/PROGRAMS

Workers' Self-Management in Mexico--Engaged in assisting several small, cooperatively managed communities and businesses being created in Mexico. One is an urban setting in which workers are establishing light manufacturing cooperatives to revitalize the regional economy and ensure their own future through self-determination. The other is a participatory approach to organization-building on a rural ejido in which a group of families is seeking grass-roots empowerment through the creation of a kibbutz-like collective system (1982-85).

Enterprise Mentors: International Enterprise Development Foundation--Economic development research and consulting on the informal economy of the Third World, starting in the Philippines; raising $400,000 and organizing a board of directors, setting up a staff to do training and technical assistance in Manila. By the mid 1990s expansions include two other centers in the Philippines, plus start ups in Brazil and Mexico which have led to skill building for the poor, vocational training and mentoring, culminating the creation of credit unions, worker cooperatives, and hundreds of families enjoying new jobs and a higher living standard. By 2001 there were five offices in the Philippines, two in Guatemala, three in Mexico, and one each in Brazil, and El Salvador. Over 10,000 jobs were created or expanded in one year alone, benefiting over 50,000 family members. Some 36,000 microentrepreneurs received management training on EMI’s annual budget of $1.3 million (1988-2001).

Eastern Europe/Ex-USSR Transition--Action research, data collection and technical assistance provided to government policy makers, company managers, and labor leaders involved in attempting to shift from state-owned, centrally planned bureaucracies to market economies, entrepreneurial cultures in which organizations install new technology, improve production and quality, and develop democratic decision-making. Efforts so far have focused on the telecommunications and steel industries of Poland, small manufacturers of Lithuania, and large firms of Belarussia--bearing producers, truck assembly, lingerie plant, and watch factory (1991-97).

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Ouelessebougou-Utah Alliance: Launched economic development effort among seventy-two indigenous villages of 35,000 people in southern Mali, West Africa. Working with a U.S. board, Mali field staff, and graduate students from BYU, U. of U., and Harvard, a development program was designed to create rural, worker-owned cooperatives for women. A village banking system was established to provide access to credit for poor, would-be microentrepreneurs. Training programs in basic business, financial skills, and management were prepared, tested, and refined for use in creating hundreds of new jobs, higher incomes, and dozens of rural cooperatives (1994-2001).

Global Job Creation: Collaborated with students in action research teams to design and implement economic development strategies for the poor in Third World areas of Indonesia, Nigeria, Kenya, Jamaica, as well as in Bulgaria, Russia, the United States (Wyoming, Florida, and Utah Valley), the Navajo Nation, and the Goshute Tribe. New NGOs were created including Chasqui Humanitarian Foundation of the Andes (for Peru), Humanitarian Link (for Kenya), the Liahona Foundation (for Nigeria), the Russian Enterprise Development Foundation, Inc, and H.E.L.P. Honduras economic development in Central America. This was expanded to H.E.L.P. International and change agents were sent to not only Honduras, but El Salvador, Peru, and Venezuela. More recently H.E.L.P. has expanded to Bolivia, Brazil, and Guatemala as well (1998-2006).

Unitus: In 1999, business colleagues and I formed this new NGO as a microfinance accelerator. I was the first chairman of the board of trustees and so far we’ve raised and committed $6.4 million to our partners: Pro Mujer in Mexico and SKS India in Andra Pradesh (1999-2003). This innovative strategy for scaling up microcredit to hundreds of thousands of poor families is building a global reputation and we now have 6 partners in India, plus others in Kenya, Argentina and the Philippines (2003-2006).

Developing Western China: A new strategy was designed to respond to requests for technical assistance from various regions in China – Guangxi, Yunnan, and especially Sichuan provinces. A team from the Marriott School has mounted a major participatory action research project to do economic development among poor ethnic communities (2000-2002).

MicroBusiness Mentors: Local nonprofit social enterprise established to fight poverty and build family sustainability among poor Latinos in Utah Valley. M&Ms provides microbusiness training, loans to start new microenterprises, and pro bono mentoring/consulting (2002-2006).

Empowering Nations: Student NGO focused on education, literacy and strengthening the poor in southern Brazil and Somaliland, East Africa in partnership with the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), as well as in Thailand, Ghana, Panama, etc. (2002-2006).

Global Change Agents, Inc.: President of a nonprofit capacity-building technical assistance firm providing training assessment and consulting to NGOs around the world (2003-2005).

Center for Economic Self-Reliance: Culminating 15 years of work to put BYU on the global map, CESR was officially established in late 2002 with $3 million in outside funding. With several colleagues, the Marriott School has become the leading light for microcredit research and social entrepreneurship strategy. CESR grew out of the faculty Committee for Alleviating Poverty; a five-year institutional plan for BYU was created at the Microcredit Summit; the annual BYU MicroEnterprise Conference was launched (9 years); the Journal of Microfinance was established; two dozen NGOs doing village banking around the world were created out of BYU courses; and new courses on social entrepreneurship, NGO management, and microcredit have been taught. Over 500 students from BYU, Harvard, U of U, USU, BYU-Idaho, Colorado State, Virginia Tech, Stanford, Portland State, Berkeley, etc. have become

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volunteer social entrepreneurs doing Third World action research and service. Over one hundred presentations and papers at various conferences have been given. More than 40 articles on microcredit and social entrepreneurship have been published, along with over 3 dozen students who received mentoring on their theses from 1989-2006.

OTHER PROFESSIONAL POSITIONS

Adjunct Professor--Institute of Management and Administration, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 1975.

Managing Editor--Exchange Magazine, 1976-79.

Member--National Coordinating Council, Association for Self-Management, Washington, D.C., 1979-83.

Adjunct Faculty--New School for Democratic Management, San Francisco, California, 1981.

Visiting Faculty--Labor Studies Center, University of Michigan, Summer 1981.

Research Projects Evaluator, National Science Foundation, 1981.

Board Member--Action Resources, Inc., Salt Lake City, Utah, 1981-85.

Board of Directors--National Center for Employee Ownership, Arlington, Virginia, 1984-87.

Consultant--Participation Associates, Amherst, Massachusetts, 1984-85.

Research Associate--Women's Research Institute, Brigham Young University, 1985-86.

U.S. Steel/Geneva Works--Community Advisory Board, Utah County, 1986.

Board of Directors--Hyatt Clark Industries, New Jersey, 1981-86.

Executive Director--Small Business Development Center, Provo, Utah, 1985-86.

Advisory Committee--Governor's Office of Planning and Economic Development, State of Hawaii, 1986-87.

Founder, Board Member, Secretary/Treasurer and Vice President—Enterprise Mentors: International Enterprise Development Foundation, St. Louis, Missouri, 1989-2001.

International Advisory Board--OD Center, Warsaw, Poland, 1991-95.

Visiting Professor-- Vilnius University, Lithuania, 1992.

Technoserve--USAID Joint Project on International Development, Connecticut and Washington, D.C., 1992-1994.

Board of Directors--Ouelessebougou Alliance, Mali, West Africa, 1994-2001. Served as vice chair of the board in 1998, and was elected board chair for 1999-2000.

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Chasqui Humanitarian Foundation of the Andes – Co-founder and board of directors, the Sacred Valley of the Inca, Peru, 1998-2001.

International Development Network, Founder & Chair, coalition of some 30 LDS-related charitable organizations, 1998-2004.

Board of Trustees – Salt Lake Community Services Council, Salt Lake City, 1999-2000.

Humanitarian Link – Nonprofit NGO board member, 1998-2000.

H.E.L.P International (Help ELiminate Poverty) – Nonprofit founder and board chair, 1999-2006.

Unitus – Global NGO created to empower the Third World poor. Co-founder, original chairman of the board, and trustee, 2000-2006.

Action Against Poverty – Co-founder and board member of AAP, a nonprofit foundation, 2001-2004.

Empowering Nations – Co-founder and board chair, 2003-2006.

Wave of Hope, Thailand -- Founder, 2005.

MicroBusiness Mentors – CEO, Co-founder, 2002-2006.

Eagle Condor Humanitarian, Peru -- Advisory Board, 2004-2006.

Rescue-A-Million, New York City -- Advisory Board, 2005-2006.

Ascend International, Global -- Advisory Board, 2005-2006.

AFFILIATIONS

Academy of ManagementAmerican Association for the Advancement of ScienceAmerican Psychological AssociationAmerican Sociological AssociationSociety for the Psychological Study of Social IssuesAmerican Association of University ProfessorsIndustrial Relations Research AssociationUnion of Concerned ScientistsSociety for the Study of Social ProblemsAssociation for Workplace DemocracyInternational Industrial Relations AssociationThe Inter-American Society of PsychologyIndustrial Cooperative Association Delaware Valley Federation for Economic DemocracyInternational Association for the Economics of Self-ManagementInternational Sociological AssociationLatin American Council on Self-Management

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International Communal Studies AssociationSociety for the Advancement of Socio-EconomicsInternational Association of Business and SocietyMicrocredit SummitCredit with Learning Exchange

EDITORIAL SERVICE

Manuscript reviewer for the following:

Journal of Management EducationJournal for the Scientific Study of ReligionUtopian StudiesJournal of International and Area StudiesCornell University PressPrentice Hall Publishing Co.Addison Wesley Co.

EDITORIAL BOARD

Co-editor, Journal of Microfinance SAM Advanced Management Journal, Board of EditorsCo-editor of a special issue of Policy Studies Journal

UNIVERSITY TEACHING

Courses:

Graduate level courses—Organizational Development and Change, MBA Organizational Behavior, Third World Development, Consulting Processes, MBA Ethics, Business and Society, Industrial Democracy, Social Entrepreneurship, Civil Society.

Undergraduate level courses—Introductory Organizational Behavior, Public Management Ethics, Democratic Management, Honors, Leadership, and Global Change Agentry.

Educational Vision/Mission:

To build a sustainable student movement for alleviating global poverty through a type of Mormon Peace Corps.

To help students achieve congruence between good organizational theory and gospel principles and values.

To inspire students with a greater vision of how they can not only “canonize” what is known, but learn to analyze it and to explore what is not known, thereby solving some of humanity’s most serious problems.

To empower students so that collectively we can change the world.

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Student Mentoring

Over the years I have spent a great deal of time and energy closely collaborating with students. I urge them to call me by my first name because I want them to feel I am truly a co-learner with them, a colleague rather than a professor possessing all knowledge and behaving toward them in condescending fashion. Thus, we have collaborated together as scholars in reviewing the research literature, developed new conceptual frameworks, designed and conducted organizational studies in large corporate enterprises around the globe, as well as conducted village level research within indigenous communities of the Third World. These have led to dozens of co-presented conference papers, co-authored publications, and other results of university scholarship.

I have chaired theses committees for approximately 200 students at BYU and elsewhere, a number of which were later published. A result of all this time and energy has been the sponsorship of many of these students to go on to masters level and/or Ph.D. programs at top universities: Harvard, Michigan, Cornell, UNC, Stanford, UCLA, Washington, Yale, Columbia, London School of Economics, Oxford, Sussex, Reading, etc. I have helped some of them obtain Fulbright Awards and U.N. grants, as well as university-specific scholarships.

The action research type of academic work I do fosters innovation among many of my students. This often grows out of service learning projects that have always been required in my courses. What is unique to me about this kind of learning process is that so many of these projects have continued to go forward months and even years after the semester ended. Some of them eventually became for-profit entrepreneurial firms and/or consulting partnerships in the private sector. But most of them have continued as non-profit programs, foundations, or NGOs that now total over forty such entities. A number of these have enjoyed critical acclaim. For example, Brooks Dame served as a HELP International country director in El Salvador in 2002, and he has continued to return to that country each year since with groups of students to provide humanitarian service during semester breaks or vacation times, taking humanitarian supplies and trying to lift those who struggle.

Some students, like Shad Morris, received Fulbright Awards to study in Eastern Europe. About 30 students have received BYU ORCA grants for Third World studies. I have advised numerous teams of students in social enterprise competitions at BYU, Wharton, Washington, and Berkeley, where they received prize monies that enabled them to legally incorporate their non-profit organizations. Recent examples include MicroBusiness Mentors, serving the Utah Latino community; Marketplace Africa, bringing crafts from Ghanaian villages to sell through Worldstock.com; Centers for Complementary Education for Youth in Brazil; the Tsunami Pearl Jewelry Women’s Co-op of Khao Lak, Thailand; Chari-state NGO, a legal resources firm, etc.

A number of my students have enjoyed considerable recognition: BYU scholarships, research assistantships, and individual awards. For example, Valerie Chen, who did her honors thesis on the economic impacts of microfinance, using my five years of FINCA data, was selected as the BYU graduating class valedictorian in Spring 2005. In 2004 two of my students and I were recognized for our efforts to build socially responsible MBA programs, and were invited to present our work at the national Net Impact Conference in New York City. Shon Hiatt, a former MPA student I mentored, co-authored with me a microcredit study that received the Best Paper Award at the Utah Academy for Arts, Letters, and Sciences. An undergraduate student of mine, Kelvin Goh, earned first place and a $500 prize for winning the first ever Dyer Institute for Organizational Change case competition in Fall 2005.

Current and Recent Projects:

Helped design and launch the Academy for Creating Enterprise (ACE), training program to empower returned native missionaries in Cebu, the Philippines, with business skills and microcredit loans to help them create a better future.

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Launched an NGO, H.E.L.P. International, to assist victims of 1998’s Hurricane Mitch, helping to raise $116,000 and creating 47 new village banks for some 800 poor women benefiting 4,000 people. It was then restructured as H.E.L.P. International and has since sponsored programs not only in Honduras, but in El Salvador, Peru, Venezuela, Bolivia, Guatemala, and Brazil (raising over a million dollars).

Assisted with board development, banquet/auctions of the Ouelessebougou-Utah Alliance in Salt Lake City and Provo, raising some $300,000 annually for development projects in Mali, West Africa.

Founded and organized the International Development Network (IDN) leading to our first symposium held at BYU, April 1, 1999 (with some 30 charity groups) and others since.

Helped LDS leaders in Zimbabwe design a charitable program to prevent and/or alleviate the devastating African tragedy of HIV-AIDS, providing consulting, student interns, and evaluation of this organization, known as “Raising the Generation.”

Assisted a group of LDS executives create the Native American Mentoring Enterprise, (NAME), arranging for a group of my graduate students to help the founders prepare an organizational structure and training materials to teach young Navajos leadership and life skills.

Supervised an in-depth assessment of an LDS-related NGO, Liahona Economic Development Foundation (LEDF) in Nigeria carried out by a team of 3 students, after which we began to raise funds in Utah for microlending in West Africa.

Mentored BYU students to do a project aiding the Goshute Tribe near the Nevada-Utah border, performing a feasibility study for setting up a microcredit program through the Utah Microenterprise Loan Fund.

Oversaw two dozen students in the Fiji Distance Learning Program, operated by graduate students and undergraduates serving in the South Pacific. This was done in cooperation with the Church’s CES administration, offering courses to young Fijian adults and returned missionaries so that with OB, management and computer skills, they will qualify for better careers and a positive future.

Helped to create a partnership between former Mexican mission presidents and my BYU students who traveled to Mexico to help create Cumorah University, consisting of several educational institutions to train returned native missionaries so they may enjoy a higher quality of life. This effort has now expanded to include the creation of the Hispanic University for Latinos in Utah.

In contrast to the above long-term sustainable programs, I also sponsored numerous other short-term student service projects including assisting the First Hope Orphanage in Nepal, collecting eye-wear for rural Mexicans, Utah Valley March of Dimes, Starlight UK, the Utah Valley Food and Care Coalition, the Rose Foundation Schools in Guatemala, helping an orphanage in Cabo Verde, Mexico, aiding the Alma Success Academy in Guatemala, establishing a school in Northern Honduras, and so forth.

Some two dozen BYU students, faculty and staff launched a microenterprise assessment, training 45

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and development program, SOAR China, in South and Western Regions of the People’s Republic of China.

My students and I have created seven documentary videos on our projects in Latin America, as well as eleven web sites, eight newsletters, and numerous power point presentations on programs in Mali, Nigeria, Honduras, Peru, El Salvador, Venezuela, Cumorah University in Mexico, Thailand, China, Ethiopia, Ivory Coast, Uganda, Nicaragua, and Western Samoa.

Three colleagues and I formed a new nonprofit foundation, Action Against Poverty, to facilitate the start-up and growth of dozens of NGOs doing Third World relief, education, healthcare, and economic development. We also assisted in building the Timpanogos Community Network and the Provo Economic Coalition with local activist groups working to foster community social change through companies, government agencies, banks, and service agencies.

In response to the horrific 12/26/04 Asian tsunami that killed hundreds of thousands of people and left four million homeless, my students and I spent four months in early 2005 designing a rebuilding strategy, training over one hundred social entrepreneurs, who each spent at least a month on the coast of Khao Lak, Thailand. Known as Wave of Hope, we helped build one hundred and twenty new houses, made furniture for village homes, helped to build dozens of long-tailed fishing boats, reopened and taught in schools, cleaned up mounds of debris, and helped survivors in refugee camps. We launched several worker-owned cooperatives to ensure long-lasting, sustainable livelihoods for various groups of villagers.

Building on Wave of Hope’s impacts, we have leveraged that work into Empowering Nations, and begun mobilizing college-age social entrepreneurs to volunteer in more countries, as well as working toward long-term social enterprises in Thailand. New projects for 2006 consist of recruiting and training volunteers for education in Ghana, family self-reliance in Mozambique, microenterprise expansion in Peru, and a new microfinance start-up in Panama during summer 2006.

ORGANIZATIONAL TRAINING PROGRAMS

Human resource seminars, off-site executive conferences, and interpersonal skills development services have been organized and directed to such groups as the following:

School personnel--Brigham Young University, Arizona State University, University of Utah, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor and Flint school districts.

Church leadership training for professionals, lay leadership, and conferences throughout Utah, Michigan, Ohio, and Indiana in the U.S. as well as others throughout Latin America.

Management development seminars for such clients as Ford Motor Company, Dearborn, Michigan; Cole National Corp., Cleveland, Ohio; General Motors, Grand Rapids, Michigan; DME Co., Madison Heights, Michigan and Youngwood, Pennsylvania; Signetics Corporation, Orem, Utah; Pittsburgh Paint and Glass Corporation, Huntsville, Alabama; St. Louis University Hospitals, St. Louis, Missouri; Wilson Foods, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma; Intermountain Health Care, Salt Lake City, Utah; Westinghouse Corp., Baltimore Maryland.

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Governmental training and research with officials/employees of St. Petersburg, Florida; Michigan Municipal League; the cities of Detroit, Flint, and Pontiac, Michigan; Utah State Prison, State Division of Rehabilitation, Veterans Administration Hospital; Ogden City; U.S. Forest Service; Hawaii State Government.

Cross-cultural management seminars conducted in Brazil for Morrison-Knudsen Engineering, Bureau (nucleus of assessment and involvement of business personnel); ISOP-sponsored training in OD technology in Mexico City with firm of DATA, S.C.; Exxon Corporation in Santiago, Chile; Imperial Oil of Calgary, Canada.

VOLUNTEER ACTIVITIES

Consultation, workshop training, research, and other forms of technical assistance have been provided to various environmental groups, unions, and public interest organizations in the U.S. as well as overseas. The following groups are representative of those worked with:

Idaho Conservation League; Northern Rockies Action Group, (Montana); American Federation of Amalgamated Meat Cutters; Black Economic Development League; Legal Aid Society; American Indians, Unlimited; Utah Migrant Council; Jeannette Sheet Glass Corp. (Pennsylvania); Barbizon Corp. and International Ladies Garment Workers Union, Local 430; Salt Lake Northwest Community Council; United Rubberworkers, Local 178 (Dayton, Ohio); Black Muslim Poultry Cooperative (Cleveland); Yellow Cab Drivers Association, Inc. Denver; Group Empresa Humana (Mexico); El Cid: Foundation for Indian Development (Guatemala); Inter-Faith Center on Corporate Social Responsibility (New York City); Canyonlands Fruit Growers Co-Operative; Navajo Development Council; Indo-Chinese Refugees; Filipino Farmworkers Co-operative (Hawaii); Oneida Tribal Council (Wisconsin); Solidarnosc Trade Union (Poland); Prince Cooperatives (Kenya); Mentores Empresariales (Guatemala); New Generation (Brazil).

HONORS & AWARDS

Corporate Teaching Award--Graduate School of Management, Brigham Young University, 1984.Outstanding Teacher of the Year--chosen by graduating students, Brigham Young University, 1986.Second Place, Contemporary Issues Articles, Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, 1987.Outstanding Faculty Award--chosen by faculty of the Marriott School of Management for the year 1989.Award for Outstanding International Service--plaque presented by BYU Student Service Association, 1993.Community Hero Nomination—service award, Atlanta Summer Olympic Torch Relay, 1995.Karl G. Maeser university-wide Excellence in Teaching Award, BYU, 1995.Working Toward Zion, my book was honored as a 1997 best seller at Media Play, Inc.The Distinguished David O. McKay Lecture for 1997 at BYU–Hawaii was based on my book Working

Toward Zion: “The Law of Scarcity vs. the Law of Consecration.”My writings were featured as a source of material for a new dramatic production, Gadianton, produced by

the BYU Department of Theatre and film, written by Eric Samuelsen, directed by Robert Nelson, May -June, 1997. The play lays out major ethical and economic dilemmas, as old as events in

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Book of Mormon times, as clear as Joseph Smith’s visions of leadership and stewardship, as modern as the cruelty of mass corporate downsizings in America during the 1990s.

Honored as BYU’s humanitarian at a string instrument concert, the Firebird Quartet, performed as a benefit recital to aid Mali, West Africa, BYU, May 21, 1997.

The “Good Samaritan Award,” given to Enterprise Mentors International, the NGO I founded in 1990. This recognition is given by the Acton Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty, founded by Father Robert Sirico, a Paulist priest. Our humanitarian program was one of only ten awards out of over 700 organizations considered in 1997.

Institutional Action Plan drafted by Gary Woller and me was one of only three plans of over a hundred submitted by universities around the world with the honor of being presented at the Microcredit Summit of Councils in 1998.

Recipient of the Distinguished Lecture Award in Honor of Dr. Glen M. Vernon, Society for the Scientific Study of Religion, Canada, 1998.

Circle of Honor Award, given by the BYU Student Honor Association for being an “exceptional example of honor, integrity and commitment to Christ-centered principles,” 1999.

Recipient of the first “Lowell Bennion Humanitarian Award,” Salt Lake City, Utah, 1999.Distinguished Service Award. Utah Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters. Presentation held in Cedar

City, Utah, April 14, 2000.Our Heroes Award. Presented by the Feedoms Foundation at Valley Forge, Utah Chapter, for the 15 year

efforts of the Ouelessebougou-Utah Alliance, Salt Lake City, Utah, February 23, 2000.Humanitarian Achievement Award. Presented by the Chasqui Humanitarian Foundation of the Andes,

Salt Lake City, Utah, Fall 2000.Award for Humanitarian Service. Presented by the Program in Religious Studies at the Center for the

Study of Ethics, Utah Valley State College, Orem, Utah, October 2000.Recipient of the 2001 Senator Reed Smoot Outstanding Award as Provo City’s Entrepreneur-of-the-Year,

supported by the Chamber of Commerce.Nominated as a Torch Bearer for the 2002 Salt Lake Winter Olympics.Honored at BYU’s Mentored Learning Environments Recognition Banquet sponsored by the Office of

Research and Creative Activities, April 10, 2001.Received the First South High Alumni Honor Roll Award for Outstanding Community Service. Salt

Lake City, Utah, 2001.Establishment of the Woodworth Humanitarian Prize: At the 4 th Annual BYU Microenterprise

Conference held April 5-7, 2001 it was announced that the Marriott School and microcredit organizations around the world had joined together to create the Warner P. Woodworth Humanitarian Service Prize to recognize outstanding leadership in the field of microfinance. It became an annual award that includes a Third World craft product as recognition, as well as a cash prize to be donated in the winner’s name to any nonprofit humanitarian organization of his or her choice. In the spirit of becoming a global change agent, the Prize will designate individuals who have truly transformed the world by their personal sacrifice, radical strategies, and long-term vision.

Nominated for a “Fast 50” Award as one of the top “movers and shakers” among Fast Company Magazine’s worldwide readers, 2002.

Recognition for 2 years of “Outstanding Humanitarian Service” to Salvadorian victims of the 2001 earthquake, U.S. Ambassador to El Salvador, 2002.

Finalist, Center for Entrepreneurship Business Plan Competition ($500), BYU, 2002.Our BYU delegation was recognized in New York City for having the most successful microenterprise

program at any university in the world: Developing new courses, 6 annual conferences, a new journal, research, publications, student mentoring, and NGO startups. Microcredit Summit +5, New York City, November 2002.

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Plaque of Appreciation for 3 years of BYU social entrepreneurs laboring to build sustainable strategies for the poor in Central America, OEF (Women’s Economic Organization), El Salvador, 2002.

Award for Humanitarian Service, Presented by the Center for the Study of Ethics, Utah Valley State College, Orem, Utah, 2002.

Best non-profit startup/MicroBusiness Mentors, a $1000 prize my students and I won in 2003 for having the best social entrepreneurship business plan, Marriott School Center for Entrepreneurship, 2003.

Leadership Award. One of twelve LDS leaders chosen in its first annual recognition event from among Meridian’s 200,000 readers in 170 countries, Meridian Magazine, 2003.

Best Paper Award: Utah Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Letters, Business Division, 2003. Financial Prizes: $25,000 from the Gay Family Foundation, $7,500 for excellence from the Crystal

Springs Foundation, to H.E.L.P. International, our student NGO, 2003. Hero Award presented to our NGO, Chasqui Humanitarian, a charity I co-founded in my EMBA ethics

course, presented by the Freedoms Foundation of Valley Forge for our 5 years of international service in Peru and Bolivia, 2003.

Outstanding MBA Teacher, OB/HR Track, Marriott School, February 25, 2005. First recipient of the new Social Innovator Award, Brigham Young University, March 10, 2005.Appreciation award for Wave of Hope tsunami relief project, from General Lertrat, head of Thailand

government’s tsunami rebuilding effort, and Condoleezza Rice, U.S. Secretary of State, July 2005.

Certificate of Commitment Award at President Bill Clinton’s new “Clinton Global Initiative (CGI), New York City, September 15-17, 2005.

15 Years of Humanitarian Service; Recognition by LDS First Presidency, to Enterprise Mentors International, October 28, 2005.

Microfinance Practitioner Excellence Award to our India partner NGO, Swayam Krishi Sangram (SKS), from Grameen Foundation-USA, Washington, DC., November, 2005.

Social Capital Award/Unitus Innovations; Presentation from Fast Company Magazine/Monitor Consulting Group, New York, January 2006.

UNIVERSITY SERVICE

Chair:

National Conference, "Productivity and Quality of Working Life in the 80s" (1981).Admissions Committee, Department of Organizational Behavior (1976-78, 1983-85).School of Management Communications Committee (1978-79).International Conference: "Ethics and Business in the Pacific Rim" (1988).National Conference: "Organizing for the 90s" (1990).Department of Organizational Behavior Chair (1989-92).Co-Director, First International Executive Study/Travel Tour to Asia, BYU EMBA program (1991).Organizational Behavior Department, New Faculty Search Committee (1993-95).Executive Education Committee, OB Department (1993-95).Latin American Business Strategies Conference (1995).Graduate Studies in International Development (1997-98).Co-chair: BYU Annual Microenterprise Conference (1998-2000).Co-chair: Committee to Alleviate Family Poverty Through Microcredit (1998-2002).International Development Network (1998-2003).

Member:49

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BYU Annual Microenterprise Conference (2000-2003).Reviewer, Journal for International and Area Studies (1994-99).MSM Undergraduate Curriculum Committee (1996-97).Executive Masters of Organizational Behavior Committee (1995-96).Marriott School of Management, Faculty Recognition and Development Committee (1993-96, 2002-2003).University Task Force on Creating New MA/MOB Joint Masters Degree (1993-94).Executive MBA Curriculum Committee (1992-94).Executive MBA Policy Committee (1992-2002).Marriott School of Management Executive Committee (1989-92).MBA Executive Committee (1989-90).International Development Committee, Kennedy Center for International Studies (1988-90, 1997-2002).Ethics Committee (1985-86, 1987-89, 1998-99).International Management Committee (1985-86, 1987-90).Organizational Behavior Department Steering Committee (1977-79, 1985-86, 1988-2002).Entrepreneurship Committee (1985-88).Human Resource Management Committee (1984).School of Management Publications Committee (1983-84).Research and Professional Development Committee (1981-83).New Library Planning Committee (1981-83).Faculty Tenure and Promotion (1979-81, 2002-2005).Executive Committee, Latin American Studies Program (1979-80).University Task Force on Women's Concerns (1977-78).MBA Executive Committee (1977-78, 1989-91).Faculty Advisory Board—Center for Economic Self-Reliance (2003-2006).College/Community Relations Advisory Committee, UVSC president appointment (2004-2005).

Faculty Advisor to Students:

Independent Voters, Student Organization--Faculty Advisor (1986).Ouelessebougou-Utah Alliance Student Club (1997-99)Grameen Support Group, BYU Chapter (1997-2000).Alpha Kappa Psi Business Fraternity, BYU (1999-2002).FINCA Chapter, BYU (2004-2005).

Practicum:

Beginning in 1981-82, I established a program on Industrial Democracy within the School of Management, which led to the creation of several new courses, internships for graduate students from the MBA and OB departments, joint faculty-student research, writing of papers and conference presentations. With other faculty from sociology, manufacturing, engineering and OB, we redesigned the original system and launched a five year effort, Program on Economic Innovation and Revitalization (PEIR) beginning in 1987. It combined theory in business management and manufacturing with practical, hands-on leadership and entrepreneurial experience. Both graduates and undergraduates participated in this innovative practicum for up to two years, learning concepts and practicing them through an on-campus enterprise we established, Equitech (through 1993).

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Since 1996 I have launched a number of “stewardship” initiatives to collaborate with students, scholars and practitioners around the globe designing programs to counter poverty, especially in developing nations or those of Eastern Europe in transition. We have jointly designed project proposals for funds, scholarships for young people, graduate student awards and I have supervised these “social entrepreneurs” as they have started new NGOs in Russia, Thailand, and Bulgaria; evaluated programs like that of FINCA in El Salvador and Mentores Empresariales in Guatemala; served as interns at the Grameen Bank in Bangladesh and/or Grameen Foundation, USA; developed new programs in Jordan, Western Samoa, Zimbabwe, Fiji, and high in the Andes of Peru, as well as other projects in Nigeria, and Dominican Republic. More recent action research teams have been creating sustainable programs in Kenya, Brazil, the Goshute Tribe and Navajo Nation, as well as domestic efforts in Utah and Florida. The major thrusts since 1998 were in Peru, Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala, Venezuela, Bolivia, Brazil, and Sichuan, China. More recently, I offered pro bono consulting to Reach the Children, a New York-based NGO working in 7 countries; Paramita Group (Thailand); Engage Now (Ethiopia); HART (Ghana); NAME (Navajo Mentoring and Education), Empowering Nations (Somaliland, Brazil and Thailand).

NON-ACADEMIC PRESENTATIONS

Impact of the Women's Movement on Men. Co-chaired a panel during campus Women's Awareness Week, December 7, 1977.

Women's Issues: The Masculine Point of View. Moderator of panel during BYU Women's Conference, February 9-11, 1978.

Problems of Multi-National and Expatriate Managers. Presentation to International Relations Meeting, November 8, 1978.

Interdepartmental Cooperation. Workshop presented to administrators of BYU Division of Continuing Education, September 21, 1978.

Organizational Ethics. Panel member during School of Management Week, November 7, 1978.Graduate School Survival Tactics. Speech to MBA Students and Spouses Association, September 22,

1979.The Use of Cultural Themes in Understanding Organizational Processes in Latin America. Organized

symposium held January 8, 1980.Integrating Human Manufacturing Systems in Organizations. Presentation to graduate students, College

of Engineering, Science, and Technology, February 4, 1980.The Cambodian Holocaust. Speech in support of campus Indo-Chinese Relief Campaign, February 27,

1980.Collective Bargaining in the 80s. Keynote speaker, BYU College of Nursing Conference on

Professionalism, September 17, 1980.Issues in Organizational Effectiveness. Speech at the 23rd Annual Seminar, Executive Women

International, Provo, Utah, September 26, 1981.Quality of Working Life: An Update. Presentation at Human Resources Planning Conference, BYU,

February 19, 1982.The Mormon Conscience: New Voices/New Realities. Panelist at Annual Men's and Women's

Conference, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, April 16, 1983.Corporations Overseas: Demise or Brave New World? Panelist and moderator at conference on

multinational business, BYU, February 16, 1983.Give Us a Place to Stand and We Will Move the Earth. Presentation at conference on Strategies for

Change, BYU, February 15-17, 1984.

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Computers, Technology, and the Future of Work. Panelist at the Law School, February 29, 1984 (with Hon. Willard Wirtz, former U.S. Secretary of Labor).

Ethical Implications of Organization Development. Colloquium at the School of Management, April 3, 1984.

Labor Buyouts. Presentation at the BYU "Breakthroughs '84" Campus-wide Conference. November 9, 1984.

Steel Trends in the United States. Speech at BYU College of Engineering. November 21, 1984.Problems of the Steel Industry and Local Implications. Panelist--BYU School of Management.

December 11, 1984.Military Industry and Converting Weapons to Non-Defense Production. Speech to Utahns For a Nuclear

Freeze, Provo, February 27, 1985.Structural Unemployment: The British and U.S. Experience. Speech at BYU, March 20, 1985.Utah Valley Economic Strain. Presentation to the Private Industry Council, Provo, April 10, 1985.Conflict Resolution and Crisis Management. Presentation to the Utah League of Cities and Towns, Salt

Lake City, September 19, 1985.Implementing Organizational Change. Speech to the American Productivity and Inventory Control

Society, Utah Valley Chapter, Springville, March 27, 1986.The Black Hole of Utah's Industrial Economy. Speech to the Utah Democratic Forum, February 7, 1986.Applications of the Mondragon System of Cooperatives to our Local Economy. Presentation to

Mountainland Association of Governments, UVIDA, Utah Technical College, Provo/Orem Chamber of Commerce, May-June, 1986.

The Search for Utopia: Hutterites, Kibbutzniks, and Mormons. Speech to BYU—Hawaii Women's Organization, October 24, 1986.

Regional Economic Development: The Basque Experience. Kennedy International Center, December 9, 1987.

Conflict Management. Presentation to National Association of Accountants, Salt Lake City, October 19, 1988.

Ethics for What Purpose? Panelist at BYU Honors Symposium, February 7, 1989.Professional Ethics and Management. Speech to the Manufacturing Technology Department, February 8,

1989.Leadership for a Changing World. MSM speech, BYU, April 12, 1990.W(h)ither Cuba? Latin American Symposium. David M. Kennedy Center, BYU, April 10, 1990.Industrial Democracy: East and West. Conference on "Organizing for the 90s," BYU, October 8-9,

1990.U.S. Foreign Policy: War, Politics, & Immorality. BYU, January 14, 1991.Inventing the Future: Grassroots Empowerment in the Philippines. BYU Students for International

Development, March 7, 1991.Third World Development: Economics with a Human Face. Kennedy Center for International Studies,

March 13, 1991.The Dynamic International Environment. American Society for Public Administration Conference on the

Internationalization of Economic Development, Westminster College, Salt Lake City, April 29, 1991.

Academic Survival and Success. Faculty Academic Leadership Conference, BYU, May 2, 1991.Corporate Ethics and Management. Farm Management Company, Provo, Utah, August 15, 1991.Involvement in Third World Strategies. International Society, 2nd Annual Meeting, Provo, Utah, August

20, 1991.The Politics of Hunger in the 90's. Keynote speaker at BYU's Annual Banquet, Students for International

Development, Dec. 3, 1991.

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Challenges of Managing in Developing Nations: The Philippines Case, BYU International Students, February 20, 1992.

Trickle up Economics: Formulating and Implementing Strategies for Development in the Third World. BYU Honors Seminar, March 10, 1992.

Reform and Revolution in Latin America, MSM MBA Students, March 19, 1992.After the Berlin Wall: Present Reality and Future Possibilities. Presentation to Provo Women's Club,

September 10, 1992.Environment, Ecology and Economics. Panelist with state government and wilderness officials, Provo,

Utah, September 29, 1992.The United Order and the Modern World Economy. Presentation to BYU faculty members, November

13, 1992.Factors for Success in Third World Development. Speech to Political Science Students, Kimball Tower,

BYU, December 6, 1992.Developing Innovations for Global Transformation. Keynote speech during BYU's International Week,

January 25, 1993.Liberty, Equality and Union: Cooperative Economic Systems. Presentation to Manufacturing Research

Institute, Provo, Utah, May 13, 1993.Organizational Transformation: E4 Model of Management. Marriott School of Management, Dean's

Seminar, May 26, 1993.International Careers in Development. David M. Kennedy Center for International Studies, BYU,

October 28, 1993.Urban Development and Income Generation. Presentation at the Forum on Sustainable Development

Lecture Series, Provo, Utah, February 9, 1994.The Socio-Economics of Zion. Paper read at the Ninth Annual Book of Mormon Symposium, Religious

Studies Center, BYU, February 11-12, 1994.Building Contemporary Utopias. Presentation to the LDS Academy of Dentists, Provo, Utah, August 13,

1994.Toward a Gospel-Centered Society. Workshop at BYU Education Week, August 15, 1994.Challenges of Living in the Modern World Economy. Four Lectures at Education Week, August 16-19,

1994.Problem-Solving Effectiveness Seminar for the Governor=s Asian-American Advisory Council. Salt

Lake City, Utah, November 5, 1994.Women in Development. Participant on Panel at the Conference on Population and Development,

Kennedy International Studies Center, Provo, Utah, November 11, 1994.Third World Women and Self-Employment. Women’s Research Institute, Provo, Utah, November 17,

1994.Global Leadership in the Year 2,000. Presentation to Professional Practitioners, BYU Counseling

Center, December 16, 1994.From Dependency to Dignity: Third World Women and Self-Employment. Women=s Research

Institute, Provo, Utah, November 17, 1994.Cultural Survival: Endangered Native Peoples of Latin America. Presentation at Timpview High School,

Provo, Utah, May 8, 1995.Humanitarian Work Around the Globe. Presentation to LDS Church managers, Salt Lake City, Utah,

June 26, 1995.Applying Righteous Principles in Our Lives. Four lectures at Education Week, BYU, Provo, Utah,

August 22-25, 1995.Corporate Transformation of Management and Work. Four lectures at Education Week, BYU, Provo,

Utah, August 22-25, 1995.

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Micro Lending and Village Development. Presentation at Women in Development Conference, BYU, Provo, Utah, October 26-27, 1995.

Corporate Downsizing’s Social Consequences. Talk show expert on Radio KCPW, Salt Lake City, January 12, 1996.

Economic Disintegration: Africa’s Legacy of Colonialism. Presentation to Provo Kiwanis Club, January 30, 1996.

Opportunities for International Outreach. Speech at the David M. Kennedy Center for International Studies, January 31, 1996.

The Political Economy of Early Mormon Country. Lecture on Western Civilization, BYU, Provo, Utah, February 6, 1996.

The Gospel of Manufacturing. Presentation to graduate students and faculty in Engineering and Manufacturing Technology, College of Engineering, BYU, Provo, Utah, February 22, 1996.

Corporate Greed, CEO Compensation and American Capitalism. Interview guest at Radio KCPW, Salt Lake City, Utah, March 4, 1996.

The ABCs of Economics: Amish, Buddhist, Catholic Economic Traditions. Workshop for MBA students, BYU, Provo, Utah, March 6, 1996.

Economic Literacy as a Tool for African Development. Presentation at BYU Literacy Symposium, March 29, 1996.

Five guest lectures and mobilization from various Provo schools as well as organizing service projects and fundraising efforts with PTA, school administrators and teachers who wanted to learn about indigenous people and Third World development in Latin America, Africa, and Asia, Provo, Utah, March-June 1996.

NGOs as a Third World Development Strategy. Presentation to the public, Provo, Utah, March 14, 1996.Team building training for “Discovery” program—multicultural potential BYU students who want to

major in business, BYU, Provo, Utah, July 10, 1996.Rescuing the Third World Poor. Speech to the Utah County Exchange Club, Provo, Utah, July 16, 1996.Toward a Gospel-Centered Society. Three hour lecture to 250 Education Week attendees, BYU, Provo,

Utah, August 19, 1996.Integrating the Temporal and Spiritual. Four Education Week sessions, BYU, Provo, Utah, August 20-

23, 1996.Gospel Dynamics for Global Change. Four Education Week sessions, BYU, Provo, Utah, August 20-23,

1996.Global Service Beyond Your Career. Keynote lecture at Career Fair Banquet for faculty, students, and

corporate recruiters, College of Engineering and Technology, BYU, Provo, Utah, October 3, 1996.

The Origins and Structures of Early LDS United Orders. Presentation to the Sons of Utah Pioneers: Wilford Woodruff Chapter, Provo, Utah, November 6, 1996.

Expanding Our Influence for Good. Workshop for BYU Honor Council, March 15, 1997.Temporal Well-Being for Families in Contemporary Zion. Presentation to BYU students majoring in

Family Science, May 28, 1997.Careers in International Studies. Presentation to BYU undergraduates at the David M. Kennedy Center,

September 17, 1997.Public Policy and the NGO Movement. Presentation to the Institute of Public Administration graduate

students, October 16, 1997.Microenterprise as a Tool for Change. Panelist at the International Development Forum, BYU,

November 13, 1997.Affirmative Action: Race, Gender and Ethnicity. Student presentation at BYU, December 2, 1997.Business as a Calling: Stewardship and the Sacred in Corporate Life. Presentation to the Marriott

School’s MBA Association, April 2, 1998.54

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Building Zion – One Family at a Time. Speech at the Fourth Annual Management Conference, Marriott School, June 18-20, 1998.

International Humanitarian Outreach. Panelist at the Fourth Annual Management Conference, June 18-20, 1998.

Research, Study, and Consulting Team on Non-Violent Change – Resolving the Conflict in Northern Ireland. Workshop of Government and Religious Leaders, Dublin, Ireland, July 18-22, 1998.

Helping Entrepreneurs in Third World Countries. Organizer and chair of a panel of the Center for Entrepreneurship’s Fall Conference, September 11, 1998.

LDS-related Humanitarian Programs. International Development Network Symposium held at BYU, October 1, 1998.

How to Establish Cumorah Universities for Latter-day Saints in Latin America. Presentation to LDS Latin American Leaders, Provo, October 2, 1998.

Creating a Perpetual Education Fund for Native Returned Missionaries in South America: Especially in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Ecuador & Venezuela. Proposal to South American Area Council of LDS, Business and Government Officials, Salt Lake City, October 4, 1998.

Methods for Rendering Effective Service. Workshop for Senior Missionary couples beginning service programs in Indonesia, Dominican Republic and Bolivia. LDS Church Welfare Department, October 9, 1998, and three weeks thereafter.

How College Students Can Change the World. Seminar for BYU Student Leaders, Sundance, Utah, October 17, 1998.

Using our Gifts to Make a Difference. Western States Women’s Association. Aspen Grove, October 18, 1998.

Want to Help Africa? Do You Love Africa? Presentation to BYU Community, October 22, 1998.The Gospel of Work: Laboring for Zion with LDS Temporal Teachings. Orem, Utah, April 25, 1999.African Development: Human Needs and Prospects in the Coming Century. Presentation to a

Community Symposium, Provo, Utah, May 4, 1999.How Today’s Youth Can Change the World for Good. Speech and award at the senior class Night of

Excellence, Mountain View High School, Orem, Utah, May 25, 1999.Community-to-Community Linkages Between Utah and West Africa. BYU presentation, September 18,

1999.Service-Learning as the Road to Genuine Education. Orem, Utah, September 19, 1999.Third World Development from the Grassroots. International Forum speaker, David M. Kennedy Center

for International Studies, BYU, September 22, 1999.Graduate Education as Radical Practice. Presentation to OB graduate students, BYU, October 27, 1999.How to Organize Citizens and Church Groups for Charitable Service. Speech in Highland, Utah,

December 11, 1999.How to Become a Reluctant Revolutionary. Presentation to BYU student association leaders, February

12, 2000.Altruism is One of Life’s Greatest Values. Speech to BYU Student Honor Forum, February 23, 2000.Mobilizing LDS Ethics and Energy So There is “No Poor Among Them.” Presentation to humanitarian

group, Orem, Utah, March 12, 2000.Appropriate Technology Methods for the Urban Poor: The Case of Manufacturing. Presentation to

faculty of the College of Engineering, BYU, March 15, 2000.The Basics of Microcredit: What it is/How it works. Speech to BYU audience, March 17, 2000.Mormon Outreach Strategies: Building Zion in the Third Word. Presentation to humanitarian group,

Provo, Utah, April 30, 2000.Building Zion, One Family at a Time. University Seminar, BYU, August 15, 2000.Faith, Hope and Charity: Creating Community Among God’s Children. University Seminar, BYU,

August 16, 2000.55

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The Gospel in Action: Change from the Heart. University Seminar, BYU, August 17, 2000.How Latter-day Saints Can Transform the Planet. University Seminary, BYU, August 18, 2000.How Business Executives Can Build a Better World. Presentation to Utah Valley CEO Roundtable,

August 23, 2000.How Utahns are Changing the World. Presentation to Northern Utah Community leaders, Farmington

City Hall, September 29, 2000.The Humanitarian of the Millennium. Presentation honoring President Gordon B. Hinckley at the Unitus

Economic Summit, Salt Lake City, Utah, October 10,2000.Transforming the Planet. Community presentation, Provo, Utah, October 15, 2000.Taking a Stand: Sustainable Development for the Third World. Presentation to Provo Kiwanis Club,

February 24, 2001.H.E.L.P. Eliminate Poverty: A Strategy for Latin America. Seminar, Orem, Utah, February 24, 2001.Student Service Learning Opportunities. Speech to Business Management Students, Marriott School,

March 1, 2001.Western China’s Economy: Empowering a Million People at a Time? Presentation on SOAR China

Program, BYU, March 2, 2001.How Business Can Give Back to the Community. Presentation to Phi Beta Lamda (fraternity for future

business leaders of America), ASBYU, March 3, 2001.The Grameen Bank Model: An Experiment in Social Collateral. Speech to Kennedy Center for

International Studies, March 14, 2001.Business Applications in Humanitarian Contexts. Speech to Provo Kiwanis Club, April, 24, 2001.How Americans Can Improve the World One Family at a Time. Kaysville, Utah, April 28, 2001.The Sheer Joy of Empowering the Poor. Presentation to the Provo Chamber of Commerce, May 23,

2001.How Business Professionals Can Become Social Entrepreneurs. Speech to Rotary Club, American Fork,

Utah, June 12, 2001.Putting “Relief” Back in the Relief Society. BYU Community Service Conference, October 24, 2001. The Global 7 Deadly Sins: IMF, World Bank, G-7, WTO, Fast Track, NAFTA and Nike? Speech to

Students for International Development, Kennedy Center for International Studies, October 23, 2001.

Humanitarian Entrepreneurs: LDS-based Outreach to Change the World. Speech to large Utah nonprofit organizations, Salt Lake City, January 8, 2002.

Community Organizing: ESOPs, Co-ops, and Other Weapons for Reversing Plant Closings. Presentation at School of Social Work Graduate Student Symposium, BYU, Provo, Utah, February 2002.

Challenges of Building Successful Humanitarian Strategies in the Altiplano of Bolivia and Peru. Speech to Chasqui Humanitarian, Salt Lake City, June 27, 2002.

The Visionary Imagination: Seeing a World Without Poverty. Presentation at BYU Student Symposium, Provo, Utah, September 2002.

Tools for Assisting the Inner City Poor. Presentation to social welfare and community service administrators of Utah County, September 4, 2002.

The Promise of U.S. Domestic Microcredit. Workshop for the Provo Latino Community, December 5, 2002.

Fighting for Justice. Panelist at the World Social Forum, Porto Alegre, Brazil, January 25, 2003.Waging Peace Rather than Pre-Emptive War in Iraq. Community Seminar, Porto Alegre, Brazil, January

26, 2003. Community Change Models in the United States: Conflict or Cooperation? Seminar for graduate

students of the School of Social Work, BYU, February 5, 2003.Raising a New Generation of Self-Sufficient Families. Presentation to village bankers, Toluca, Mexico,

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The Financial Stresses on Marriage Among Poor Families: U.S. and World Perspectives. Presentation to the School of Family Life, BYU, February 28, 2003.

From the Different Inputs of Many to the Power of One. Speech at community-wide benefit for El Salvador, Provo, Utah, March 29, 2003.

The Genius of Volunteerism. Speech to global humanitarians going abroad, BYU, April 29, 2003.Launching Family Economic Sustainability. Community speech, Thetford, England, June 14, 2003. New Social Inventions for Alleviating Community Pain. Panelist at the founding of the Provo Economic

Coalition, Provo, Utah, June 25, 2003.Accelerating Microfinance in India: The Unitus Strategy for Leveraging Economic Growth. Speech to

Rotary International, Salt Lake Valley, July 17, 2003. Social Entrepreneurship as a Tool for Expanding Family Self-Reliance. Presentation to American

volunteers, Chimaltenango, Guatemala, August 4, 2003.Learning to Excel. Speech at graduation ceremonies of the first class of MicroBusiness Mentors, Centro

Hispano, Provo, Utah, August 8, 2003.Fostering Free Market Economics from the Grassroots. One hour dialogue/Q&A, Salt Lake City K-Talk

Radio, September 4, 2003.Indicting the Guilty: The Refusal of Big Banks to Give Small Loans to Poor Individuals. Speech to

Hispanic Community, Provo, Utah, September 9, 2003. A Vision of First Hope: Orphanage Efforts in Nepal. Provo, Utah, September 10, 2003.Pay it Forward: The Growing Clout of H.E.L.P. International in Students’ Lives. BYU, September 13,

2003. Leveraging Human Potential: Managing Others to Make a Difference in Society. Presentation to student

volunteer leaders, BYU, November 7, 2003. Smashing American Imperialism: The People’s Struggle to Resist Globalization and U.S. Hegemony.

Speech at the Mumbi Resistance Movement, India, January 16, 2004.Creating Human Capital Through Strengthening Human Society. Presentation to faculty and students in

the School of Social Work, BYU, February 3, 2004.Countering Human Suffering: Giving Hope. Speech to the five-hundred attendees at the university’s

Annual Hunger Banquet, BYU, March 13, 2004.Capacity-Building in Indigenous Communities. Speech to community innovators and leaders, Tioxa,

Guatemala, August 5, 2004.How to Leverage Your OBHR Education at the Marriott School. Panel of successful MOB alumni I

volunteered to assemble and lead during the new MBA student orientation week, MSM, August 27, 2004.

The Rising Third Sector: How We Can Change the World. Speech at Academy Square, Provo Library, to HELP International Conference, September 18, 2004.

Expatriate Survival Tactics for Being a Manager in Another Country. Presentation to Marriott School graduate students (MBA, MACC, MPA), BYU, October 19, 2004.

Microfinance as a Global Strategy for Building Social Capital. Speech to BYU students, Marriott School, November 18, 2004.

Building Capacity for Family Self-Reliance. Presentation to the Latino community, Centro Hispano, December 11, 2004.

Training For Transformation: Workshop for Wave of Hope volunteers, May 12, 2005.Establishing Zion Communities: One Village at a Time. Fireside presentation, LDS community of Khao

Lak, Thailand, July 17, 2005.The Academics of Global Service Learning: How to Leverage Classroom Learning With Real World

Experience. Power point presentation at the faculty retreat of the Department of Organizational Leadership and Strategy, August 25, 2005.

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We’re Laboring For the Babies/Future Generations of the Poor Masses in Central America. Presentation at HELP International Volunteers’ Reunion, Academy Square, Provo, September 17, 2005.

Stewardship and Consecration. Two stake fireside speeches in Panama City, Panama, October 15, 2005.Small Fortunes premier showing at BYU. Panelist with other NGO leaders, October 27, 2005.Indigenous Revolution Among Central American Indians. Presentation to Latin American Studies

students, Kennedy Center, November 29, 2005.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION / MEDIA COVERAGE / ETC.

A number of projects with which I have been involved have been the subject of considerable public interest and debate, including the following:

Key efforts regarding quality of work and industrial democracy have resulted in media coverage on national television programs such as The Today Show, Bill Moyers Journal, P.M. Magazine, NBC News, 20/20, The Phil Donahue Show, ABC Nightline, McNeil - Leher Report, 60 Minutes, as well as radio programs locally, nationally, and the Voice of America internationally. Major press coverage has included The Wall Street Journal, De Moines Register, Los Angeles Times, and magazines such as Business Week, Fortune, U.S. News and World Report, Forbes, Newsweek, Dunn's Review, Industry Week, and Nation's Business. Much of this work has also been analyzed in academic journals and social change literature such as World of Work Reports, Dissent, Co-op Magazine, Workplace Democracy, Working Papers for a New Society, In These Times, and Mother Jones. Portions of research have been excerpted in the Daily Labor Report, Boardroom Reports, Christian Science Monitor, and Conference Board Research Bulletin.

Plant closings and attempts to reopen them as worker-owned enterprises--Barbizon, NRP, and McNally--featured locally in the Provo Herald, Salt Lake Tribune, Deseret News, various radio and TV stations, and across the U.S. in the Minneapolis Tribune, Cleveland's Plain Dealer, St. Louis Globe-Democrat, Houston Chronicle, Denver Post, Indianapolis Star, San Diego's Evening Tribune, Dallas Morning News, Virginian Pilot, and the Philadelphia Inquirer.

Internationally I have been interviewed for newspapers in Germany and the Netherlands, the Swedish labor publication, Arbetare (The Worker), featured in a television interview in Berlin regarding worker participation in capitalist and communist countries, interviewed on Polish radio in Warsaw, and had projects of mine covered in Britain's The Economist, the Daily Express of London, and The Times. Articles or portions of my research have been published in professional journals in Romania, Brazil, France, West Germany, Switzerland, Yugoslavia, Great Britain, Peru, Mexico, Poland, and Jamaica.

My work with General Motor’s Fisher Body Factory was featured in a 1977 corporate videotape produced by GM entitled "Quality of Work Life: Business Teams at Fisher Body". In 1980 I was featured in a commercially produced film made in New York, "In the Middle: The Role of the Third Party in Labor/Management Cooperation." My role as consultant in the conversion to worker-ownership of Hyatt Clark Industries, New Jersey, was filmed for public television in 1982, narrated by Eric Sevareid, and has appeared nationally a number of times as a documentary entitled, "Buyout."

I've also participated in several talk shows discussing such issues as Dislocated Workers, New Work Structures, Career Paths, Women and Management. These include KBYU Radio (December 1,

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1980), KUTV "Take Two," KSTV Channel 20 "Contact" (November 26, 1980), KSL Television "Face to Face" (January 12, 1981), KZJO Radio (May 4, 1983), KDYL Radio (July 19, 1984), Radio 107.5 Talk Show (September 1, 1985), Channel 4 on "Upcoming Bargaining Talks" (November 24, 1985), Radio KPFK Los Angeles "Sharing Ownership" (March 28, 1987), Honolulu TV "Island Journal" (May 25, 1987), Hawaiian Cable TV "U.S. Foreign Policy: Necessity or Duplicity," (January 15, 1987), and other programs in Denver, Philadelphia and Iowa. Presentations and talk shows also include KTALK Radio September 12, 1989 on "Business Ethics," "U.S. Foreign Policy and War in the Middle East," Channels 2, 4 and 5 (January 15, 1991), Global Economics and the Problems of International Poverty," Radio 960 KFMY (September 17, 1991); “Corporate Downsizing’s Social Consequences,” Radio KCPW (January 12, 1996), as well as “Playing Employee Hardball Hurts Everyone, BYU Professor Says” (Daily Herald, August 24, 1996); KBYU Television News Analysis on Geneva Steel’s Downsizing (March 27, 1997).

The research on "De-Steeling" resulted in a number of provocative discussions in the Utah and national media during 1984 including AP, UPI, The Salt Lake Tribune, Deseret News, Daily Herald,; TV Channels 2, 4, 5, 11; and radio programs or news broadcasts on KFTN, KJVO, KBYU, KDYL, KSL, and KEYY. Such discussions have launched a serious planning effort to create economic alternatives in the region. Presentations and consultations were made at the request of various groups: Utah State Public Utilities Commission, State Tax Commission, Department of Economic Development, local mayors and city councils, Provo Chamber of Commerce, Save Geneva Coalition, and Mountainlands Association of Governments.

The problems of Utah's economy brought a number of media appearances in late 1985 and early 1986 including interviews in Utah newspapers, The New York Times, San Francisco Chronicle, and Philadelphia Inquirer. There were talk shows on KCPX and KDYL radio as well as KUTV and KSL-TV. Channel 2 featured me in "Project 2,000: Utah's Economy in the 21st Century" (February 26, 1986). There were several interviews (Channel 11, March 4, 1986) on "Small Businesses and the Local Economy," and a feature story published in The Small Business Promoter, Vol. 5, No. 1, 1986. On February 9, 1986 I was featured in a one hour debate with Utah's Director of Economic Development on KUTV's "Take Two." I was a guest on a talk show, "Coping with Foreign Trade Deficits", July 3, 1986, radio KUER in Salt Lake City, with state AFL-CIO president Ed Mayne and U.S. Congressman Howard Nielson.

My analysis of the U.S. labor movement led to 30-60 minute participation on talk shows such as ABC Talk Radio 63 (April 9, 1985), Radio 5DN in Sidney, Australia (May 13, 1985), Newsbeat--Cable TV (March 28, 1985), various news broadcasts, and I was a guest on the NBC nationally televised program Late Night America (October 11, 1984).

I was invited to lead a group of 40 small business owners, local government officials, school teachers, steelworkers, and other citizens from Utah to testify at the Capitol in Washington, D.C. as part of a national "Communities in Distress" campaign (June 16-17, 1986). The innovative, worker-owned co-op Dr. Chris Meek and I designed and implemented with business and engineering students was featured in an educational film, EQUITECH: Integrating Manufacturing and Progressive Worker Ownership(1992).

The work of the International Enterprise Development Foundation (IEDF), now known as Enterprise Mentors International, has received growing attention, resulting in a number of requests for presentations in Utah and media coverage, such as "`Y' on Line with Enterprise Assist," The

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Daily Herald (July 27, 1992), as well as articles in BYU Today (August 1992), The Deseret News (September 10, 1992), and The Post-Register, Idaho Falls (August 21, 1994), Philippine News (September 6, 1995; January 1, 1997), St. Louis Post-Dispatch (January 9, 1997). Also a chapter in a book, When Workers Decide (Len Krimerman and Frank Lindenfeld, eds., Philadelphia, New Society Press, 1992). My work in Eastern Europe and the ex-USSR appeared as the cover story, "Inventing a New Society," BYU International, Vol. 10, No. 1, October 1992, pp. 1, 3-4, as well as a series of articles in the San Diego Universe-Tribune, "Learning From Capitalism," 1993.

Projects to create a technical assistance program in Africa for micro entrepreneurs, along with a village banking system and producer cooperatives have been featured in The Daily Herald (January 3, 1996); The Daily Universe (January 10, 1996); Deseret News (January 5, 1996); The Salt Lake Tribune (December 21, 1996); and the Utah County Journal (1997); “Utahns Build Wells, Provide Jobs in Mali,” The Universe (February 17, 1998); “BYU Adopts African Tribe,” NewsNet (September 21, 1999); a film for public viewing, “Mission for Life” on OUA was produced and shown in 1993; “Ouelessebougou-Utah Alliance Village Bank Program in Africa,” featured on Channel 1, Mali National Television. There were also brief news clips (December 13, 1998); a half-hour documentary on Alliance development programs (December 14, 1998); and a 20 minute film in 1997 “Making a Difference in Africa.”

My book, Working Toward Zion, has received considerable notice since its publication. Sources include The Daily Universe, “Authors Study LDS Economic Development” (June 26, 1996); The Daily Herald, “Book Offers Suggestions for Applying the United Order Now” (June 27, 1996); The Salt Lake Tribune, “Can LDS Aid Meet Demand of 3rd World?” (July 13, 1996). I was also interviewed on half hour media programs including radio stations such as KSGI (St. George, June 19, 1996); KENZ (107.5 of Salt Lake, June 21, 1996); KFAM (Salt Lake, June 23, 1996); as well as KBYU television (June 19, 1996). Book reviews in the media include “Working Toward Zion Explores Capitalism, United Order,” The Daily Herald, (January 6, 1997); “LDS Essays Assess Life in the Next Century”, The Salt Lake Tribune, (April 17, 1999); “Intellectuals Need to Help Others, Speaker Says,” Deseret News (July 15, 1999).

Other Third World development programs that student and business collaborators and I have worked on have been the topic of a number of media stories on “social entrepreneurship” such as “The ‘Poorest of the Poor’ Targeted in BYU-sponsored Conference,” International (Winter 1998, pp. 14-15); “Microcredit Conference at BYU,” Deseret News (February 4, 1998); “Conference to Discuss Poverty,” The Daily Universe (February 5, 1998); “Microcredit Helps Ease Poverty in the World,” Deseret News (February 6, 1998); “BYU Conference Touts Group that Makes Loans to Empower the Poor,” The Salt Lake Tribune (February 8, 1998); “Creating Zion,” Interview on 5 radio stations conducted by nationally-known investment advisor and author Wade Cook, (Winter 1998); “BYU Students Fight Poverty,” The Daily Universe (July 30, 1998); “Bank Fights World Poverty,” The Daily Universe (September 18, 1998); “High in the Andes,” Church News (November 7, 1998, pp. 8-10); “Utah Group Puts Building Skills to Work,” The Salt Lake Tribune (September 26, 1998).

During 1999 several global efforts were featured including “Microcredit Loans Making a Major Difference Worldwide,” Deseret News (March 20, 1999); “Microcredit Sparks Big Changes,” The Daily Universe (March 29, 1999); “Banishing Poverty to Museums and History Books,” (article on my projects and BYU’s growing involvement in microcredit) Brigham Young Magazine (Spring 1999, pp. 35-39); “Students Give Aid in Nigeria,” The Daily Universe (July

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21, 1999); “Conference Helps Others Become Self-Sufficient,” The Daily Universe (July 29, 1999); “Y Students Give Fijians New Hope,” The Daily Universe (October 11, 1999); “International Strengthening of the Family,” Woodworth interview on KBYU-TV, Channel 11 (November 23, 1999); “Y Students Serve,” The Daily Universe (December 7, 1999).

Several of the long-term Third World development programs we have created have been produced as film/video documentaries including: “The Business of Humanity,” 1995 commercial video on producer co-ops and microenterprise training (21 minutes); “Building Self-Reliance,” 1996 on Enterprise Mentors International (15 minutes); “Building the Filipino Spirit,” 1995 (12 minutes); “A New Heart,” 1999, on our Peru program in the Sacred Valley of the Inca (13 minutes); “Chasqui: Legacy of Empowerment,” 2000; and our Mali, Africa indigenous NGO has been featured in two videos, “I Remember Africa,” 1997; and “Ouelessebougou Village Development,” 1999 (11 minutes).

The services of 46 volunteers I took to Honduras in 1999 after the ravages of Hurricane Mitch resulted in considerable media coverage as we dug mud from homes, rebuilt bridges and houses, delivered babies, reopened schools and gave other kinds of humanitarian service, as well as organizing 47 new village banks. Stories appeared in the following: “BYU Students to Create Banks,” The Daily Universe (January 21, 1999); “Students Help Honduras,” NewsNet (March 30, 1999); “BYU Students Want to Help Hondurans Help Themselves,” The Daily Herald (April 10, 1999); “Students Race to Support Hurricane Victims,” The Daily Universe (May 11, 1999); “Cypress Siblings Make Charity for Hondurans a Family Matter,” The Orange County Register (June 29, 1999); “Loans that Beat Poverty,” Deseret News (September 12, 1999); “Student Samaritans: Synergy in the Global Neighborhood,” (coverage of my student internships in Nigeria, Bulgaria, Guatemala and Honduras) Exchange Magazine (Fall 1999 issue, pp. 14-23). “Y Students on Humanitarian Crusade,” in The Daily Universe (March 13, 2000); “‘HELP’ to the Rescue,” NewNet (June 15, 2000) featured over 90 students and volunteers who each spent several months in four nations of Latin America.

Several of our Third World development efforts received media coverage including a new video: “Fighting Poverty: The HELP Honduras Story (1999); my being featured on the television program, “Contact,” KUED Channel 7, March 13, 2000; “Students Out to Save the World,” The Daily Universe (October 16, 2000); and Community Service” The College Times (October, 2000).

The work of our NGO, Mindanao Enterprise Development Foundation (MEDF) in the Philippines, was featured by Fred Ball, “Speaking on Business,” KSL News Radio 1160, November 28, 2000; Enterprise Mentors was featured in a full page article, “Getting It Started,” The Provo Daily Herald, July 2, 2000, and we were also in a 3 page article in the Church News, December 9, 2000 (pp. 8-10) entitled “A Hand Up, Not a Hand Out.”

The first ever LDS-related UNITUS Economic Summit, held October 10, 2000 in Salt Lake City, Utah, received considerable media attention including KUTV Channel 2, KTVX Channel 4, KSLTV Channel 5 and numerous radio stations. The following newspapers also covered the story: “Conference Seeks Solutions to Poverty,” Daily Universe (October 11, 2000); “President Hinckley Honored for Service,” Daily Universe (October 11, 2000); “Humanitarian Group Hails President Hinckley” Deseret News (October 21, 2000); “Daily Bread,” Salt Lake Tribune (October 14, 2000). The humanitarian work of UNITUS also appeared in the international press including Tuhulu (Tonga), Der Stern (Germany) and L’Etoile (France) in 2001.

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Humanitarian work of mine was also featured in the Deseret News, (June 16, 2000); a project of my students at HART: “Relief Team Helps Ghana Fight Illness,” in the Daily Universe (January 18, 2000); “King Supporters Share Dream with March, Service Activities, in the Provo Daily Herald (January 18, 2000); “Students Spread Microcredit Effort,” Brigham Young Magazine (Summer Issue 2000); and “Matter Unorganized: Be Inspired to be a Doer of the World,” Provo Daily Herald (October 21, 2000); and “Service Learning Turns to Action, “Deseret News (October 28, 2000).

Over a six month period I worked to arrange a special visit to Utah by Dr. Muhammad Yunus, founder and managing director of the Grameen Bank of Bangladesh. Ultimately, I succeeded in having him speak at a UNITUS Executive luncheon for a hundred “movers and shakers” in the Salt Lake business community, as well as a presentation to 900 BYU students and faculty at the launch of the 4th Annual Microenterprise Conference on campus. Both events were held March 20, 2001 and Yunus agreed to also serve in an ongoing role as a member of the UNITUS Advisory Board, along with Chieko Okazaki and John Hatch, founder of FINCA International.

I was featured in a new university film celebrating the research and creative accomplishments of leading 10 BYU professors for being outstanding research mentors to our students. The film was premiered at an ORCA banquet for BYU administrators, faculty and honor students, April 10, 2001. Our SOAR China partnership with the Chinese Guangxi Women’s Federation was featured in their booklet on rural development and microenterprise creation, Nanning City, Spring 2001.

I was interviewed about “Mormon Executives and Their Religious Values” on WIUM public radio in Macomb, Illinois, October 18, 2001; Also television station WWIR in Illinois, “Developing Global Change Agents,” October 19, 2001. My Third World economic development work was highlighted in a 22 minute BYU-produced video “Introduction to Microcredit” to be used in various courses across campus, from all twelve sections of the Marriott School’s “Management Suite” course (integrating business with religion) to graduate courses in social work, ecology, and Third World development, 2001.

During a 2 ½ week business trip to southern Brazil, I gave 11 speeches, presentations and/or workshops to over 2,000 government, academic, corporate and public participants. Those efforts led to a number of PR and media events including a one hour panel discussion on TV Southern Brazil, interviews on local stations TVFLOR (Florianopolis TV), TVSC (Santa Catarina Television), Radio Crisul, Radio Garibaldi (in Laguna), and Radio FM in Criciuma. Five newpaper articles were published containing my remarks as well. Themes included U.S. Globalization, Third World Poverty, Microfinance Tools and Methods, as well as commentary on Brazil’s Progress Toward Modernization (June 18-29, 2001).

In 2001, I was invited to be the featured speaker at the following LDS events: Temporal Well Being of Poor Latter-day Saints: Training seminar for ten stake presidents in Curitiba, Brazil, July 1, 2001; How Latter-day Saints are Transforming the Planet: Presentation to Florianopolis Stake Fireside, Brazil, June 17, 2001; The Gospel of Humanitarian Service: Presentation to Tubarao Stake Fireside, Tubarao, Brazil, June 24, 2001.

I also gave a number of guest lectures to various Church and community groups in Utah including the following: “Becoming a Global Faith” (August 15, 2001); “How Latter-day Saints Can Change the World” (August 16); “Building a Gospel-based Community” (August 17); “Love at Home”

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(August 19); “Self-Reliance as a Practical Goal” (August 20); “Practicing True Religion” (August 21); “Stewardship: Serving Those in Need” (August 23); “Working Toward Zion” (August 24); “Social Entrepreneurship” (August 29); “Establishing New Social Purpose Ventures” (August 30). I also spoke to students and families in the Midwest (Macomb, Illinois): “Unto the Least of These: Methods for Building Zion,” October 20, 2001.

In 2001 our microcredit efforts led to a number of media spots. For example, radio clips included presentations at the following stations: KUER-FM 90.1 Salt Lake City; KLO-AM 1430 Ogden; KPCW-FM 91.9 Park City. Months of work in arranging the visit to BYU of Dr. M. Yunus, Managing Director of the Grameen Bank in Bangladesh led to news stories and interviews on KBYU-TV (March 20, 2001); The Daily Universe (March 20); “Speaker Calls for Loans to the Poor,” The Daily Herald (March 21); Y News (March 16); “Microcredit Stories to Help the Poor,” Daily Universe (March 21); Deseret News (March 23); Y News (March 30); “Microloans Give Entrepreneurs a Fighting Chance,” The Salt Lake Tribune (April 5), “Microcredit Thrives with Y,” Daily Universe (April 9); “Former Cougars Speak at Conference,” Daily Universe (April 9). In addition, there was a major story in the LDS Church News, “Helping the Poor Help Themselves, and Then Each Other” (April 21, 2001).

“Perpetual Education Fund is a Hit,” Deseret News (April 1, 2001); “Mormons Answering the Prayer of Hinckley’s Perpetual Education Fund,” The Salt Lake Tribune (April 7); Media coverage of projects I started, managed, etc. included “Microenterprise at Marriott School,” Y-News (March 20); “BYU Humantarians to Hold Fundraiser,” Daily Universe (April 20); “Students Seeking Out Humanitarian Education,” Daily Herald (April 29); “May Luncheon to Feature Dr. Warner Woodworth,” Connections: The Newsletter of the Utah Valley Entrepreneural Forum, Vol. 12, No. 5, May 2001; “Chamber Honors Provo’s Best at Annual Smoot Awards,” Orem-Geneva Times (June 20); “Utah Group Builds Homes in Peru,” Daily Herald (August 1); “Graduating BYU Student Lays Groundwork for Microcredit Programs in China,” BYU News (August 15); “Small Loans for Self-Development,” Y-News (September 14); “Woodworth Speaks on H.E.L.P. Honduras,” Western Illinois Courier (October 22); “BYU Visits WIU,” Western Illinois Courier (October 23, 2001).

April 7, 2001 at the 4th Annual BYU Microenterprise Conference held April 5-7, 2001 it was announced that the Marriott School and microcredit organizations around the world had joined together to create the Warner P. Woodworth Humanitarian Service Prize to recognize outstanding leadership in the field of microfinance. It will be an annual award that includes a Third World craft product as recognition, as well as a cash prize to be donated in the winner’s name to any nonprofit humanitarian organization of his or her choice. In the spirit of becoming a global change agent, the Woodworth Humanitarian Prize will designate individuals who have truly transformed the world by their personal sacrifice, radical strategies, and long-term vision.

2002: Our microenterprise efforts at BYU were featured in various media sources including the following: “30-Dollar Goat Helps Develop Self-Reliance,” Daily Universe, December 9, 2002; “HELP Volunteers Teach Needy Families to be Self-Sufficient,” Provo Daily Herald, December 19, 2002; “Organization Mobilizes Students to Save Lives,” Newsnet, September 24, 2002; “Microcrédito e Passo para um Outro Mundo,” Correio do Povo (Brazil), February 4, 2002; “Microfinance Provides Financial Services,” Daily Universe, Januarry 22, 2002; “Americanos Participam no Forum Social Mundial,” Jornal do Centro, February 6, 2002.

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During 2002, I offered pro bono consulting advice, conducted workshops, gave speeches, and met with NGO leaders to increase their capacity and improve their effectiveness. The following groups are the most relevant: Reach the Children (Sichuan); Enterprise Mentors (4 countries); Ouelessebougou-Utah Alliance (Mali, West Africa); HART (Ghana); NAME (Navajo Nation).

2003: Media coverage of my research and writing, as well as our field projects and/or quotes from me appeared in a number of international, national and local news outlets during 2003: “Why Micro Matters,” (article on our Unitus NGO) Time Magazine, November 24, 2003; “Y Student Puts Money Where Heart Is—In Guatemala,” Daily Universe, June 12, 2003; “Some Microlenders Prove Good Causes and Profits Mix,” Dow Jones Newswire, August 13, 2003; Microfinance Study by Professor and Student Earns Best Paper Award,” Marriott School’s Home Page, December 2003; “Charity Makes $4.7M gift to India,” Puget Sound Business Journal, June 9, 2003; “BYU Conference Centered Around Movement Dedicated to Creating Jobs, Fighting Poverty,” Provo Daily Herald, March 15, 2003; “Ouelessebougou’s Impacts,” Africa story featured on KSL Radio 1160—Fred Ball “Speaking on Business,” August 20, 2003; “Microcredit Loans the Best Helping Hand,” Seattle Post Intelligencer, March 21, 2003; “MicroEnterprise Conference Declared a Success,” Daily Universe, March 19, 2003; “Loan Mentors Started at BYU is Moving into Peru,” Deseret News, March 21, 2003; “Brazil Leaves Impression on LDS Church,” Salt Lake Tribune, April 5, 2003; “Philanthropy is a Verb,” Synergos Institute: Global Giving Matters, February/March 2003; “Provo Group Helping Salvadorans Stay Home,” Deseret News, July 6, 2003; “Student Spends Summer in Service,” Newsnet, BYU, April 29, 2003; “Super Hero: Senior Swimmer Bill Betz Changes Lives,” Daily Universe, March 23, 2003; “BYU Forms Center for Economic Self-Reliance,” announcement of CESR on the Marriot School Home Page, June 5, 2003; “Utahns Experience Africa,” Salt Lake Tribune, August 24, 2003; “Funding Micro-Miracles,” BYU Magazine, Winter 2003; “BYU Student, Professor Win Awards for Research,” Daily Universe, November 25, 2003; “Business Leaders Optimistic About Reducing World Poverty,” The Oregonian, March 12, 2003.

2004: Media stories for this year highlighted a number of my NGOs aa well as interviews and quotes from me around the globe: “Fighting Poverty at the World Social Forum,” India Times, January 16, 2004; “Americans Against Imperialism,” BBC Television, January 17, 2004; “Rich Yanks Pay It Forward in $,” Economic Times, March 5, 2004; “Run Aims to Raise Money for the Poor,” Daily Universe, April 8, 2004; “Tiny Loans Make a Big Difference in the Lives of the Poor,” New York Times, April 12, 2004; “Helping Non-Profits to Help Themselves (Unitus),” San Jose Mercury News, June 22, 2004; “Enterprise Mentors,” KBYU-TV, October 12, 2004; “Third World Microfinance,.” Daily Universe, November 1, 2004; “Economically Vulnerable Families,” CESR Newsletter, December 2004.

2005: During this year my projects were featured in a great deal of press coverage around the globe including The Economist Magazine, New Delhi Times, Business Week, The Wall Street Journal, as well as local media including being interviewed on KSL T.V., KUTV, FOX, KBYU, KUED, PBS nationally, and articles in the Daily Universe, Salt Lake Tribune, Deseret News, Daily Herald, Collegiate Post, etc. I also published a human interest article, “The Joseph Smith Tsunami Rescue Brigade of 2005” to commemorate the 200th Anniversary of the prophet’s birth, December 22, 2005 for Meridian Magazine’s 300,000 readers.

Two innovative corporate projects I worked on have been written up as cases for the Harvard Business School.

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