
The Director and The Manager
Law & Governance In A Digital Age Machiavelli Had it Easy
David S. Fushtey(Author)
Information Age Publishing
Will be published approx. on 25. February 2019
Book
Paperback/Softback
1068 pages
978-1-64113-049-3 (ISBN)
Description
Machiavelli Had it Easy is an engaging text for the emerging discipline of governance. Gaps arise when directors and managers come together from diverse vocational and cultural languages and interests. Compressed information streams in the digital age, yet few reconcile silos of business, legal expertise and regulatory public-interests for informed decisions.
This text presents research and a market-tested decision-framework for comparative law, market practice, and human nature in the vital strategic-oversight role of governance. Informed by cognitive science, business practice and legal duties, one conclusion is that bias and self-interests are instinctive but reconciling best-interests is not. Too often lessons learned from centuries of law are overlooked.
The chapters are a dozen inquiries into recurring problems in the boardroom. Part one is an entry-level technical reference of law and governance principles. Unique appendices of keywords and case notes will aid those new to markets governed by the western rule-of-law and those tripping on gaps in comparative jargon. Part two is a series of practical hot-topics in the context of law and governance; part three looks to next steps in accountability and liability.
The text will help accountants, engineers, lawyers, and business operations and market-policy experts from around the world work together, and; professors, professionals and students anticipate change. After drilling through accountability and liability for hybrid organizations, typical crises are revealed to be from a lack of aligning interests and related information churn. Conclusions of the how and why of governance systems link the human condition and the rule-of-law in the digital age.
This text presents research and a market-tested decision-framework for comparative law, market practice, and human nature in the vital strategic-oversight role of governance. Informed by cognitive science, business practice and legal duties, one conclusion is that bias and self-interests are instinctive but reconciling best-interests is not. Too often lessons learned from centuries of law are overlooked.
The chapters are a dozen inquiries into recurring problems in the boardroom. Part one is an entry-level technical reference of law and governance principles. Unique appendices of keywords and case notes will aid those new to markets governed by the western rule-of-law and those tripping on gaps in comparative jargon. Part two is a series of practical hot-topics in the context of law and governance; part three looks to next steps in accountability and liability.
The text will help accountants, engineers, lawyers, and business operations and market-policy experts from around the world work together, and; professors, professionals and students anticipate change. After drilling through accountability and liability for hybrid organizations, typical crises are revealed to be from a lack of aligning interests and related information churn. Conclusions of the how and why of governance systems link the human condition and the rule-of-law in the digital age.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Charlotte
United States
Publishing group
Emerald Publishing Inc
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Thickness: 57 mm
Weight
1583 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-64113-049-3 (9781641130493)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

David S. Fushtey
Director and The Manager
Law & Governance In A Digital Age - Machiavelli Had it Easy
E-Book
01/2019
1st Edition
Information Age Publishing
from
€62.33
Available for download
Content
Preface.
Acknowledgments.
Part I. Beyond Common Sense: The Rule-of-law In Governance
Chapter 1. Kinds Of Organizations.
Chapter 2. Kinds of Governance Strength.
Chapter 3. Beyond Common Sense.
Chapter 4. Reconciling Best Interests for Hybrid Organizations.
Chapter 5. Civil Society and Corporate Citizenship.
Chapter 6. The Rule-of-Law and Information Risk.
Part II. Beyond Trust And Loyalty: Principled Governance In Practice
Chapter 7. Beyond Trust And Loyalty.
Chapter 8. Reconciling Conflicts-of-Interests.
Chapter 9. The Art of Regulating Governance Conduct.
Chapter 10. Blame and Liability.
Part III. Integrity Infrastructure
Chapter 11. Accountability And Integrity.
Chapter 12. Good Timing.
References.
APPICIES: A: Keywords.
B: Legal References.
C: Governance Project Graphic Elements.
D: Tables of Representative Market References.
Acknowledgments.
Part I. Beyond Common Sense: The Rule-of-law In Governance
Chapter 1. Kinds Of Organizations.
Chapter 2. Kinds of Governance Strength.
Chapter 3. Beyond Common Sense.
Chapter 4. Reconciling Best Interests for Hybrid Organizations.
Chapter 5. Civil Society and Corporate Citizenship.
Chapter 6. The Rule-of-Law and Information Risk.
Part II. Beyond Trust And Loyalty: Principled Governance In Practice
Chapter 7. Beyond Trust And Loyalty.
Chapter 8. Reconciling Conflicts-of-Interests.
Chapter 9. The Art of Regulating Governance Conduct.
Chapter 10. Blame and Liability.
Part III. Integrity Infrastructure
Chapter 11. Accountability And Integrity.
Chapter 12. Good Timing.
References.
APPICIES: A: Keywords.
B: Legal References.
C: Governance Project Graphic Elements.
D: Tables of Representative Market References.