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Join Laura Gassner Otting as she hosts this week's episode of LGOtv with guest, Alexandra Carter. Alexandra Carter - Negotiator , Law Professor, Tiny Giant.Alexandra Carter is a professor at Columbia Law School, where she teaches conflict resolution. She is a world-renowned negotiation trainer for the United Nations, Fortune 500 companies, civil rights agencies and more. In 2019, Alex was awarded the Columbia University Presidential Award for Outstanding Teaching, Columbia University's highest teaching honor. Her first book, Ask for More: Ten Questions to Negotiate Anything, was published by Simon & Schuster and became an instant Wall Street Journal bestseller -- the first negotiation book solo-authored by a woman to make that list.Professor Carter is a frequent media commentator on negotiation and pay equity for women, with appearances on MSNBC's Morning Joe and MSNBC Live, Hardball with Chris Matthews, the CBS Early Show and NPR Marketplace. She is a contributor for NBC News' Know Your Value, a news site devoted to helping women grow in their careers and reach their full potential. She lives in Maplewood, NJ with her husband and daughter.3:40 When I'm helping other people, I can access my more powerful self.7:25 What's our framework for doing it for the sisterhood?8:00 Look in the mirror and ask the 5 Powerful Questions.11:09 What would challenge look like for me?12:14 How have I been successful in the past? Start from success.22:44 Sometimes people don't know what they need in a negotiation.29:02 There's a superpower most negotiation books don't talk about.33:16 “Tell me” is the most powerful open question.36:21 We are never going to solve this issue until we are able to write the other side's victory speech = “The I/We”39:17 Look at negotiation as a venn diagram.45:17 The power of fear and guilt.50:38 Real power, comes from being who you are.55:30 Small steps make quantum leaps.https://www.instagram.com/alexandrabcarter/https://www.linkedin.com/in/alexandrabcarter/https://twitter.com/alexbcarter?lang=enalexbcarterFreebie - 7 Days to Ask for More - https://alexcarterasks.com/7days/
Ever wonder why an astounding 95% of CEOs in Corporate America are white males? Why do so few black people - and other minorities - make it to the corner office? Most companies talk a good game about building a robust and diverse leadership pipeline. Organizations claim to create cultures that inspire and enable people to reach their full potential. The best ideas win. Everyone has equal opportunity. Executives gain power through hard work and intellect. The best people will rise to the top. But these are just the lies we tell ourselves, according to Dr. Robert Carter, the country's most renowned expert on these topics - an acclaimed author and distinguished professor emeritus of psychology at Columbia University It makes us feel good. It makes us feel worthy. But there are deeper, psychological forces and invisible barriers at play. And even though we can't see these barriers with the naked eye, they exist, and they are causing real harm and economic pain. Agree or not, Professor Carter shines an interesting perspective on this complex topic, and helps us understand the root, psychological causes and structural barriers to achieving progress. Perhaps we should take his advice seriously. Until we do the hard work necessary to become more self aware and empathic, we won't be able to capitalize on the economic benefits of diversity and inclusion. Click on www.imperfectleaders.com for free weekly episodes delivered to your inbox and the opportunity to join live discussions with top leaders.
Ever wonder why an astounding 95% of CEOs in Corporate America are white males? Why do so few black people - and other minorities - make it to the corner office? Most companies talk a good game about building a robust and diverse leadership pipeline. Organizations claim to create cultures that inspire and enable people to reach their full potential. The best ideas win. Everyone has equal opportunity. Executives gain power through hard work and intellect. The best people will rise to the top. But these are just the lies we tell ourselves, according to Dr. Robert Carter, the country's most renowned expert on these topics - an acclaimed author and distinguished professor emeritus of psychology at Columbia University It makes us feel good. It makes us feel worthy. But there are deeper, psychological forces and invisible barriers at play. And even though we can't see these barriers with the naked eye, they exist, and they are causing real harm and economic pain. Agree or not, Professor Carter shines an interesting perspective on this complex topic, and helps us understand the root, psychological causes and structural barriers to achieving progress. Perhaps we should take his advice seriously. Until we do the hard work necessary to become more self aware and empathic, we won't be able to capitalize on the economic benefits of diversity and inclusion. To receive free podcast episodes each week, subscribe at www.imperfectleaders.com
Blood and Bread. A national reckoning between two mourning mothers. Today, Rob and Lee interview Professor James Carter, Dean of the History Department at Saint Joseph's University. The story that the three discuss is Lu Xun's story "Medicine." Professor Carter's most recent book is Champions Day, a book about the last gasp of old Shanghai.
Professor Carter is seeking to get petitions signed so that can run for Councilperson at larger in the city of Newark.
Thank you for joining us on Breakfast With Champions! Today we hear from Alexandra Carter! Alexandra Carter is a Clinical Professor of Law and the Director of the Mediation Clinic at Columbia Law School. She is a world-renowned negotiation trainer for the United Nations, Fortune 500 companies, and governments around the world. In 2019, Professor Carter was awarded the Columbia University Presidential Award for Outstanding Teaching, Columbia University's highest teaching honor. Professor Carter's first book, Ask for More: 10 Questions to Negotiate Anything, was published by Simon & Schuster on May 5, 2020, and became an instant Wall Street Journal Business bestseller – the first negotiation book solo-authored by a woman to make that list.
Thank you for joining us on Breakfast With Champions! Today we hear from Alexandra Carter! Alexandra Carter is a Clinical Professor of Law and the Director of the Mediation Clinic at Columbia Law School. She is a world-renowned negotiation trainer for the United Nations, Fortune 500 companies, and governments around the world. In 2019, Professor Carter was awarded the Columbia University Presidential Award for Outstanding Teaching, Columbia University's highest teaching honor. Professor Carter's first book, Ask for More: 10 Questions to Negotiate Anything, was published by Simon & Schuster on May 5, 2020, and became an instant Wall Street Journal Business bestseller – the first negotiation book solo-authored by a woman to make that list.
Thank you for joining us on Breakfast With Champions! Today we hear from Alexandra Carter! Alexandra Carter is a Clinical Professor of Law and the Director of the Mediation Clinic at Columbia Law School. She is a world-renowned negotiation trainer for the United Nations, Fortune 500 companies, and governments around the world. In 2019, Professor Carter was awarded the Columbia University Presidential Award for Outstanding Teaching, Columbia University's highest teaching honor. Professor Carter's first book, Ask for More: 10 Questions to Negotiate Anything, was published by Simon & Schuster on May 5, 2020, and became an instant Wall Street Journal Business bestseller – the first negotiation book solo-authored by a woman to make that list.
Thank you for joining us on Breakfast With Champions! Today we hear from Alexandra Carter! Alexandra Carter is a Clinical Professor of Law and the Director of the Mediation Clinic at Columbia Law School. She is a world-renowned negotiation trainer for the United Nations, Fortune 500 companies, and governments around the world. In 2019, Professor Carter was awarded the Columbia University Presidential Award for Outstanding Teaching, Columbia University's highest teaching honor. Professor Carter's first book, Ask for More: 10 Questions to Negotiate Anything, was published by Simon & Schuster on May 5, 2020, and became an instant Wall Street Journal Business bestseller – the first negotiation book solo-authored by a woman to make that list.
Thank you for joining us on Breakfast With Champions! Today we hear from Alexandra Carter! Alexandra Carter is a Clinical Professor of Law and the Director of the Mediation Clinic at Columbia Law School. She is a world-renowned negotiation trainer for the United Nations, Fortune 500 companies, and governments around the world. In 2019, Professor Carter was awarded the Columbia University Presidential Award for Outstanding Teaching, Columbia University's highest teaching honor. Professor Carter's first book, Ask for More: 10 Questions to Negotiate Anything, was published by Simon & Schuster on May 5, 2020, and became an instant Wall Street Journal Business bestseller – the first negotiation book solo-authored by a woman to make that list.
Thank you for joining us on Breakfast With Champions! Today we hear from Alexandra Carter! Alexandra Carter is a Clinical Professor of Law and the Director of the Mediation Clinic at Columbia Law School. She is a world-renowned negotiation trainer for the United Nations, Fortune 500 companies, and governments around the world. In 2019, Professor Carter was awarded the Columbia University Presidential Award for Outstanding Teaching, Columbia University's highest teaching honor. Professor Carter's first book, Ask for More: 10 Questions to Negotiate Anything, was published by Simon & Schuster on May 5, 2020, and became an instant Wall Street Journal Business bestseller – the first negotiation book solo-authored by a woman to make that list.
Thank you for joining us on Breakfast With Champions! Today we hear from Alexandra Carter! Alexandra Carter is a Clinical Professor of Law and the Director of the Mediation Clinic at Columbia Law School. She is a world-renowned negotiation trainer for the United Nations, Fortune 500 companies, and governments around the world. In 2019, Professor Carter was awarded the Columbia University Presidential Award for Outstanding Teaching, Columbia University's highest teaching honor. Professor Carter's first book, Ask for More: 10 Questions to Negotiate Anything, was published by Simon & Schuster on May 5, 2020, and became an instant Wall Street Journal Business bestseller – the first negotiation book solo-authored by a woman to make that list.
Thank you for joining us on Breakfast With Champions! Today we hear from Alexandra Carter! Alexandra Carter is a Clinical Professor of Law and the Director of the Mediation Clinic at Columbia Law School. She is a world-renowned negotiation trainer for the United Nations, Fortune 500 companies, and governments around the world. In 2019, Professor Carter was awarded the Columbia University Presidential Award for Outstanding Teaching, Columbia University's highest teaching honor. Professor Carter's first book, Ask for More: 10 Questions to Negotiate Anything, was published by Simon & Schuster on May 5, 2020, and became an instant Wall Street Journal Business bestseller – the first negotiation book solo-authored by a woman to make that list.
Thank you for joining us on Breakfast With Champions! Today we hear from Alexandra Carter, a Clinical Professor of Law and the Director of the Mediation Clinic at Columbia Law School. She is a world-renowned negotiation trainer for the United Nations, Fortune 500 companies, and governments around the world. In 2019, Professor Carter was awarded the Columbia University Presidential Award for Outstanding Teaching, Columbia University's highest teaching honor. Professor Carter's first book, Ask for More: 10 Questions to Negotiate Anything, was published by Simon & Schuster on May 5, 2020, and became an instant Wall Street Journal Business bestseller – the first negotiation book solo-authored by a woman to make that list.
Does joint representation during a prenuptial agreement violate professional rules of conduct? Professor Carter reviews Prenuptial and Postnuptial Agreements. The American College of Trust and Estate Counsel, ACTEC, is a professional society of peer-elected trust and estate lawyers in the United States and around the globe. This series offers professionals best practice advice, insights and commentary on subjects that affect the profession and clients. Learn more in this podcast.
WSF54 - Ask for More with Alexandra Carter Alexandra Carter is a Clinical Professor of Law and the Director of the Mediation Clinic at Columbia Law School. In 2019, Professor Carter was awarded the Columbia University Presidential Award for Outstanding Teaching, Columbia University’s highest teaching honor. Professor Carter’s teaching and research interests lie in the field of alternative dispute resolution, primarily in mediation and negotiation. She is a leading trainer on negotiation and mediation for many from the private and public sectors, including the United Nations, where she designed a negotiation workshop as part of the first ever skills-building summit for female diplomats, entitled “Women Negotiating Peace;” U.S. courts and federal agencies; private corporations, such as Comcast NBCUniversal, Time Warner and Viacom; and law firms, including Cravath, Swaine & Moore, Morrison & Foerster and Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman. Back at home, she serves on the New York State Alternative Dispute Resolution Advisory Committee commissioned by Chief Judge Janet DiFiore; she previously served on the Alternative Dispute Resolution Committee for the New York City Bar Association as well as the Mediator Ethics Advisory Committee for the New York State Unified Court System. She is an admitted mediator for the Southern District of New York. Prior to joining the Columbia faculty, Professor Carter was associated with Cravath, Swaine & Moore LLP, where she worked as part of a team defending against a multibillion dollar securities class action lawsuit related to the Enron collapse, served as the senior antitrust associate on several multibillion dollar mergers, and handled cases involving copyright law. She also worked as an analyst at Goldman Sachs. She is a former U.S. Fulbright Scholar to Taiwan. Professor Carter received her Juris Doctor degree in 2003 from Columbia Law School, where she earned James Kent and Harlan Fiske Stone academic honors. She also won the Jane Marks Murphy Prize for clinical advocacy and the Lawrence S. Greenbaum Prize for the best oral argument in the 2002 Harlan Fiske Stone Moot Court Competition. After earning her degree, Professor Carter clerked for the Hon. Mark L. Wolf, U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts in Boston. Professor Carter has been sought as a media commentator in the area of conflict resolution, with appearances on MSNBC Live, Hardball with Chris Matthews, the CBS Early Show and NPR Marketplace. Her first book, Ask for More: Ten Questions to Negotiate Anything, will be published by Simon & Schuster on May 5, 2020 and became an instant Wall Street Journal bestseller -- the first negotiation book solo-authored by a woman to make that list. Professor Carter is the Executive Director of Stand Up Girls, a New Jersey organization dedicated to the empowerment of girls and women. She lives in Maplewood, New Jersey with her husband, Greg Lembrich and their daughter Caroline. “The biggest negotiation you will have is within the four walls of your own brain.” -Alexandra Carter Today on When She Founded: Asking for what you are worth with clarity and confidence The importance of picking the right problem to solve Realizing that if you are talking to someone you are negotiating What makes you different is your market advantage How to lessen the gap of understanding your value The three things that your ask should contain How to reconcile your imposter syndrome The importance of audacity The Elenor Beaton Episode The Brandi Bernoskie Episode Connect with Alexandra on her website alexcarterasks.com and on LinkedIn, Instagram and Clubhouse. Below is a link to her Free 7 Day challenge. The second link is for digital course - which will do a second launch at the end of the 7 day challenge (May 11) https://alexcarterasks.com/7days/ https://alexcarterasks.com/courses/ Subscribe, Rate & Share Your Favorite Episodes! Thanks for tuning into today’s episode of When She Founded with your host, Somer Hamrick. If you enjoyed this episode, please head over to Apple Podcasts to subscribe and leave a rating and review. Don’t forget to visit our website, connect with Somer on LinkedIn, and share your favorite episodes across social media. If you are a female founder who needs more support please visit and sign up on our Launch to Leads Lab website.
Today’s conversation features Christopher Carter, Assistant Professor and Assistant Chair & Department Diversity Officer in Theology and Religious Studies at the University of San Diego. Christopher Carter’s teaching and research focuses on philosophical and theological ethics, Black and Womanist theological ethics, environmental ethics, and animals and religion. He approaches religious studies as a liberation ethicist committed to exploring how the moral economy of U.S. religious thought and culture impact the everyday lives of marginalized populations, particularly African American and Latinx communities. He is active in the leadership of the American Academy of Religion where he serves as a steering committee member of both the Religion and Ecology and the Animals and Religion Group. Professor Carter is also a pastor within the United Methodist Church and currently serves as an assistant pastor at Pacific Beach United Methodist Church. He is married, and, together with his spouse, they have one child, Isaiah. We at the Academy got to know Christopher through Frank Rogers, longtime Academy Faculty and Advisory Board member. He taught Christopher as a PhD student at Claremont School of Theology several years ago. Christopher served as faculty for one of the Academy Day Apart Retreats in fall of 2020 and we hope to learn alongside him again soon. Enjoy Christopher and Claire's conversation, which starts with parenting and ends with Howard Thurman, and is interlaced with wisdom, laughter, and joy throughout.
Due to the Christmas and New Years Holiday, this is a re-air from December 14th. Thank you. It’s Monday with Mary FioRito and she returns to the show after being away due to a Covid scare and she has come back NEGATIVE and she is feeling great and very happy to be with us. Today, she is joined by two guests, first Professor Carter Snead who has a new book out and on the Wall Street Journal’s Top Ten Books of 2020: What It Means To Be Human: The Case for the Body in Public Bioethics and for those of you who missed his first discussion of the book, Professor Snead once again shares what it focuses on and what it means to people. Mary’s second guest is another former show guest: Dan Proft, who this time with Mary talk about so many things including in areas of politics, health, and other areas that have been National News. For more information on Mary FioRito, Professor Carter Snead, and Dan Proft, visit online at: Mary FioRito: https://eppc.org Professor Carter Snead: https://www.amazon.com/What-Means-Be-Human-Bioethics/dp/0674987721 and https://www.hup.harvard.edu/ Dan Proft: dan@danproft.com and https://560theanswer.com/
According to the Wall Street Journal, What it Means to Be Human is one of the best 10 books of 2020. During this episode, Dr. Orlandi discusses some of its main themes with the author, Carter Snead, Professor of Law at Notre Dame and Director of the De Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture. "Expressive individualism," "moral imagination," "abortion", "assisted suicide,” these are just hints of the content of an extraordinary podcast that deserves going a little longer than usual! Get your coffee and enjoy! The Wall Street Journal has listed Professor Snead's book as one of the 10 best books of 2020: https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-10-best-books-of-2020-11607556369?fbclid=IwAR1Ip7qqc80yAASf3qxCVNb3oZvGamVStJSWi-OyZhLMaBoKncpmH7vBspE You can purchase his book from Harvard University Press: https://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674987722
It’s Monday with Mary FioRito and she returns to the show after being away due to a Covid scare and she has come back NEGATIVE and she is feeling great and very happy to be with us. Today, she is joined by two guests, first Professor Carter Snead who has a new book out and on the Wall Street Journal’s Top Ten Books of 2020: What It Means To Be Human: The Case for the Body in Public Bioethics and for those of you who missed his first discussion of the book, Professor Snead once again shares what it focuses on and what it means to people. Mary’s second guest is another former show guest: Dan Proft, who this time with Mary talk about so many things including in areas of politics, health, and other areas that have been National News. For more information on Mary FioRito, Professor Carter Snead, and Dan Proft, visit online at: Mary FioRito: https://eppc.org Professor Carter Snead: https://www.amazon.com/What-Means-Be-Human-Bioethics/dp/0674987721 and https://www.hup.harvard.edu/ Dan Proft: dan@danproft.com and https://560theanswer.com/
What is the anthropology–the account of human nature and human flourishing–that grounds the American law of bioethics? Is it an appealing one, or are there problems with it? In our latest podcast with Professor O. Carter Snead of the University of Notre Dame Law School, we probe these and related questions in his recently released… The post Legal Spirits Episode 029: “What It Means to Be Human”–a Discussion with Professor Carter Snead appeared first on LAW AND RELIGION FORUM.
Powerful Interview With A Friend Of Amy Coney Barrett, Professor Carter Snead by Priests for Life
What a way to kick off this show! Amanda Carter is a professor of Finance & Economics at Bethel University Former Vice President of Derivatives Sales Trading at JP Morgan, and Former Portfolio Manager at Parametric. Tony interviews Professor Carter learning about her career path, her investing suggestions, and most importantly how to conduct ethical business in a notorious industry.
What were some of the forces roiling Shanghai, and by extension, China as a whole, in the early 1940’s? In Champions Day: The End of Old Shanghai, Dr. James Carter describes the many worlds of Shanghai on the eve of World War II, focusing on the city’s famed race track a few weeks before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. In capturing the confluence of these three disparate, coexisting worlds on November 12, 1941, Professor Carter explores the multi-faceted history of old Shanghai and the various international influences, characters, and events that shaped the city’s evolution and its profound schisms. He joined the National Committee on June 16, 2020 for a virtual program to discuss his new book. Speaker bio: https://www.ncuscr.org/event/carter-champions-day
Champions Day in the city of Shanghai, November 1941. The world was at war but the clubhouse at the Shanghai Race Club (now People's Park) was packed with owners and punters cheering on the pony. The funeral of Shanghai's richest widow, Liza Hardoon, was a spectacle which filled the streets of the International Settlement. Japanese occupiers and their Chinese collaborators came together in a bizarre ritual celebrated the birthday of revolutionary leader Sun Yat-sen. The opening of a new movie featuring, of all subjects, Charlie Chan, had folks lining up at the box office of the local cinema. The world had changed but the "Lone Island" of Shanghai persisted, as it had since becoming a treaty port a century earlier. Historian James Carter's fascinating new book Champions Day: The End of Old Shanghai brings to life the vivid tableau of an era coming to an end. By the end of the year, Japanese authorities would take control of Shanghai and the city would never again be the same. What did the end of the colonial era mean for Shanghai and its residents? Why were race tracks such powerful symbols? Professor Carter joins us as we discuss the history of horse racing, colonialism, and the last days of Old Shanghai. 7.0.3
At our first Learn@Lunch presentation for 2020, Professor Lemuria Carter explores the issue of data management within the public sector. As Head of the School of Information Systems and Technology Management, Professor Carter unpacks her research into select US government agencies to assess benchmarking techniques around data management maturity. From these findings, she explores why data maturity is critical for multi-faceted government agencies, and how this can be best assessed going forward.
Episode: “The Business of Legal Nurse Consulting with Professor Renalda Carter” Welcome to another episode of the Business of Nursing! In this episode, Professor Renalda T. Carter and I discuss transitioning from Healthcare Professional to Legal Nurse Consultant. So if you want to transition from Healthcare Professional to Legal Nurse Consultant, learn how to take your nursing career to the next level by becoming a Legal Nurse Consultant and work from home, tune in now! In this episode, you'll learn about: “Transitioning from Healthcare Professional to Legal Nurse Consultant" Why Professor Carter start her Legal Nurse Consultant Journey Problems she noticed along the way Solutions she provides Marketing tips that work ABOUT OUR GUEST In looking for an expert who is elevating the voice of the nurse in the healthcare industry and beyond, Professor Carter stood out as a guest of choice and here is why: Professor Renalda T. Carter is the Founder and Senior Consultant at RTC Legal Nurse Consulting, LLC She has twenty years of nursing experience and teaches Healthcare Law Professor Carter provides workshops and mentoring programs for aspiring Legal Nurse Consultants. https://thebusinessofnursing.com/blog/legal-nurse-consulting
The return of Steel Klaus, the astonishing revelation of Professor Carter's private life and Mr Biceps meets The Press!
Lecture 12 begins with a description of Eurodollar futures contracts including calculation of profit or loss on and example contract. Professor Carter further discusses trade imbalance, politics, and international currency markets and valuation. He describes interest rate differentials and parity using the difference in U.S. and Canadian dollar values and interest rates. Interest rates, bonds and the cost of carry market.
Lecture 11 outlines the three types of financial futures and how they are priced. Professor Carter describes the characteristics of different debt instruments, bonds and eurodollars. The role of interest rates in debt instrument markets. He answers why financial futures have become so popular and how to read yield curves.
Trading equity indices an introduction. Professor Carter discusses commodity price relationships, explaining inter-temporal commodity pricing relationships - soybeans and wheat are used as examples. The importance of storage and how storage affects markets, and accounting for the costs of storage.
This class describes what options contracts, or options on futures contracts are. It also answers what the difference is between a call option and a put option. What does it mean to go long or go short? Professor Carter describes the top U.S. exchanges, when they were founded and the primary trading instruments on each. Next, he describes similar international futures markets. Old-fashioned pit trading vs. electronic trading methods are described. Carter discusses the importance of futures markets on the world economy.
Professor Adrian Carter has more than 30 year’s experience, as an architect and academic, working in the Nordic countries and more widely internationally. He is recognised as an expert on the work of Sydney Opera House architect, Jørn Utzon; and was the founding director of the Utzon Research Center, established the International Utzon Symposiums and realised the building of the Utzon Center in Aalborg, Denmark, designed in collaboration with Jørn Utzon. He was also an advisor and contributor to the Australian Government in its nomination of the Sydney Opera House for inscription on the World Heritage List. Professor Carter has studied alongside some of the world's most recognised architectural theorists, including Professor Jan Gehl - known for his focus on pedestrianisation and the human scale in urban design - at The Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen, Professor Geoffrey Broadbent at Portsmouth School of Architecture and renowned architectural historian Dalibor Vesely at the University of Cambridge. In professional practice Professor Carter has worked with significant international architects including Professor Reima and Raili Pietilä in Helsinki, Finland, Niels Torp in Oslo, Norway, Henning Larsen and Dissing+Weitling in Copenhagen, Denmark and Ancher, Mortlock and Woolley in Sydney on a broad array of architectural and urban design projects, as well as architectural design competitions, master-planning and civil-engineering projects; including the Finnish Embassy in New Delhi, Sief's Palace in Kuwait, Tampere Library in Finland, Aker Brygge harbour development in Oslo, housing proposals for Walsh Bay in Sydney, the Storebælt Suspension Bridge in Denmark and the European Embassies of the European Union in Abuja, Nigeria. Prior to becoming Head and Professor of Architecture at the Abedian School of Architecture, Bond University, Professor Carter was Associate Professor at Aalborg University in Denmark, and has taught at a number of respected architecture schools including Denmark’s Aarhus School of Architecture and, in a visiting capacity, at the University of Sydney, Portsmouth University and University of Tasmania.
Professor Carter compares and contrasts approaches to racial integration in two democratic societies, the United States and South Africa. (October 22, 2009)
CBS Radio Workshop - April 13, 1956. CBS network. "Jacob's Hands". Sustaining. A good story about a farm hand who discovers he has the power to heal. Aldous Huxley (author), Christopher Isherwood (author), Hans Conried, Harry Bartell, Helen Kleeb, Herb Butterfield, Janet Stewart, John Dehner, Lawrence Dobkin, Parley Baer, Vic Perrin, Virginia Gregg, William Conrad. 1/2 hourJacob Ericson is a shy, enigmatic, and somewhat inept ranch hand who works for crotchety Professor Carter and his crippled daughter, Sharon, on a ranch in California's Mojave Desert in the 1920s. One day he learns that his hands possess the mysterious gift of healing, a gift he uses to cure animals (whom he adores). Sharon (whom he also adores) then persuades him to heal her.
Alexandra Carter is a Clinical Professor of Law and the Director of the Mediation Clinic at Columbia Law School. She is a world-renowned negotiation trainer for the United Nations, Fortune 500 companies, U.S. courts and federal agencies, and more. In 2019, Professor Carter was awarded the Columbia University Presidential Award for Outstanding Teaching, Columbia University's highest teaching honor. Professor Carter's first book, Ask for More: 10 Questions to Negotiate Anything, was published by Simon & Schuster on May 5, 2020, and became an instant Wall Street Journal Business bestseller – the first negotiation book solo-authored by a woman to make that list. Today on Full Body F*ck Yes:How to serve while maintaining your boundariesHow to negotiate: from salary to speaking feesWhy examining your needs & feelings is key for negotiatingWhy it's crucial that women negotiate for their worthWomen of color: how to negotiate when there's unconscious biasWhat to consider negotiating for outside of moneyThe Media Visibility Accelerator is the #1 marketing course for purpose-driven entrepreneurs like you who want to scale your business to $25k+ per month. Get $500 off the course right now with the code “POD500.”Follow Alex:Instagram: @alexandrabcarter Website: alexcarterasks.com LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/alexandrabcarter Book: Ask for More: 10 Questions to Negotiate AnythingConnect with Abbey:Instagram: @abbeygibb Website: abbeygibb.com This show is produced by Soulfire Productions