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Welcome to another episode of The Coral Capital Podcast, a show about startups, technology, and venture capital with a focus on Japan and Asia broadly. Today, we're joined by Richard Katz, NYC correspondent for the Weekly Toyo Keizai and the author of several books, including his latest, “The Contest for Japan's Economic Future: Entrepreneurs vs. Corporate Giants”. In this episode, we'll take a step back to dive into the historical and macroeconomic context of Japan and examine the role of startups in this environment. We'll cover a range of topics including: The healthy and necessary role of firm mortality in economic growth The barriers to entry and exit in Japan Debunking the myth of Japan's risk-averse culture and uncovering the real issues in its risk vs. reward system Insights Japan can gain from french startup policies Japan's strength and history in invention and re-invention How job mobility, women, and the new generation are reshaping the workforce How a change in the LDP's political dominance can open doors for change Richard's book, "The Contest for Japan's Economic Future: Entrepreneurs vs. Corporate Giants," is available for purchase here, and his Substack, Japan Economy Watch, can be subscribed to here. ----- For founder's building Japan's next legendary companies, reach out to us here: https://coralcap.co/contact-startups/
In this podcast interview, Richard Katz, a special correspondent for Toyo Keizai and author of The Contest for Japan's Economic Future, discusses Japan's economic challenges and potential for recovery. He reflects on Japan's history, the rise of its industrial power, and the current economic stagnation. Katz emphasizes the importance of entrepreneurship and innovation, arguing that Japan needs to move away from propping up outdated industries and focus more on supporting startups. He explains how the existing economic model, including the lifetime employment system and zombie companies, has stifled growth and innovation. Katz calls for a balance between supporting large firms and encouraging new ventures, highlighting the need for government policy changes to foster entrepreneurship and drive economic growth in Japan. Richard's Links: Substack: https://richardkatz.substack.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/richard-katz-937308204/ Latest Book: https://www.amazon.com/Contest-Japans-Economic-Future-Entrepreneurs/dp/0197675107 Want to support the podcast? Check the podcast's ko-fi page to help keep me well-caffeinated and making content: https://ko-fi.com/businesssuccessjapan Be sure to follow or subscribe for more Japanese language and cultural insights. And if you enjoy the podcast, please leave a review so that other people can find it as well. And of course, if you have any questions, comments, or suggestions for future episodes, please email me at businesssuccessjapan@gmail.com. I'd love to hear from you! Leave me a voice message here: https://anchor.fm/businesssuccessjapan/message
Join us on a journey of remedies and resonance with Patricia Kaminski, co-director of the Flower Essence Society alongside Richard Katz since 1980. Together they have authored numerous books about flower essences, including the best-selling Flower Essence Repertory. They also manage Flower Essence Services, which produces flower essences and herbal products at Terra Flora, their 27-acre Biodynamic garden in the Sierra foothills of California. Patricia shares her personal journey in which she discovered the profound power of flower essences. Presenting the history of flower essences and their progenitor, Dr. Edward Bach, Patricia explains how to understand and articulate the characteristics of a flower in relation to their healing characteristics. She shares how a materialist worldview limits our ability to understand how nature is working at subtler levels, and how making a remedy is about the critical synergy of the four elements in tandem with the flower's unique essence. Patricia discusses her favourite combination remedies for foundational healing, and describes how flower essences create a resonant effect at the energetic and soul level of a person to catalyze healing. Sharing insightful case studies, she brings us practical advice on integrating flower remedies into our daily lives and the transformative power of using words and affirmations alongside them. We uncover the key qualities for healing practitioners who make use of flower remedies, underscoring the importance of presence, empathy and vision in guiding clients along their healing paths. Learn about Patricia's humanitarian work and how she's encouraging a conscious awakening to nature's sentience and inherent healing qualities, and discover how these natural remedies offer emotional balance and an awakening to our authentic selves. Patricia helped design and majored in the first Women's Studies Program at the University of Nebraska, and helped found a unique counselling centre for women students. She first discovered the remarkable effectiveness of English flower remedies in helping children with learning problems such as dyslexia, and in a counselling program for juvenile offenders. She has studied widely in the fields of healing and plant science, including Waldorf education and Goethean plant science. Patricia has also authored Flowers That Heal, which describes the fundamental principles of flower essence therapy.flowersociety.orgfesflowers.comLiked what you heard? Help us reach more people! Please rate and review us on Apple Podcasts Start Energy Healing Today!Unlock your healing potential with our informative and fun introductory 10 hour LIVE online class in energy healing Our Flagship Training is Setting the Standard in Energy HealingThe next 100 hour EHT-100 Energy Healing Training is open for enrollment! LIVE & online - 10th February - 21st July 2024. Join us in Bali in 2024 - Our Retreat AND first in-person EHT-100 Training are now booking! Contact Field Dynamics Email us at info@fielddynamicshealing.com fielddynamicshealing.com Thanks for listening!
[This interview was originally published on November 11th, 2021.] UPDATE: Richard Katz is publishing a new book on entrepreneurship in Japan. If you're interested in pre-ordering, be sure to subscribe to his substack to get 30% off the hardcover version. It's one of the best ways to support writers, as it signals interest to publishes and encourages them to do larger prints and invest more in advertising: https://richardkatz.substack.com/p/30-off-for-my-book-on-japan-entrepreneurship Today's guest Richard Katz has worked for decades as a journalist working on the Japanese economy, and he has written two books on Japan: "The System That Soured" and "Japanese Phoenix." He is now working on a third, about how to nurture a new generation of high-growth, innovative small and medium enterprises in Japan. He has published various op-eds and essays in publications such as "Foreign Affairs," The "Financial Times," Toyo Keizai, and the "Wall Street Journal Asia." A few of the topics covered in today's conversation include the dormant entrepreneurship in Japan, the broken promises made to working women, and why structural issues around finance in Japan may be one of its greatest hindrances to growth. Richard's Links: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/richard-katz-937308204/ Blog: https://richardkatz.substack.com/welcome Entrepreneurial Revival In Japan: A False Spring or Real Opportunity? (UC San Diego School of Global Policy and Strategy): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Xo1LYV860g Further Reading: Why Nobody Invests in Japan: https://www.foreignaffairs.com/guest-pass/redeem/5gAlISIPRr8 Old corporate champions can't save Japan: https://www.eastasiaforum.org/2021/05/30/old-corporate-champions-cant-save-japan/ Japan's Looming Climate Showdown: https://www.foreignaffairs.com/guest-pass/redeem/rdp-a4Eil74 An Election Mandate For Growth and Redistribution: https://toyokeizai.net/articles/-/464660 Want to support the podcast? Check the podcast's ko-fi page to help keep me well-caffeinated and making content: https://ko-fi.com/businesssuccessjapan Be sure to follow or subscribe for more Japanese language and cultural insights. And if you enjoy the podcast, please leave a review so that other people can find it as well. And of course, if you have any questions, comments, or suggestions for future episodes, please email me at businesssuccessjapan@gmail.com. I'd love to hear from you! Leave me a voice message here: https://anchor.fm/businesssuccessjapan/message --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/businesssuccessjapan/message
Dedicated to the respectful exchange between Indigenous teachings about health and healing and mainstream Western psychology, Richard Katz received his Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology from Harvard, where he taught for nearly 20 years. Over the past 50 years, Dr. Katz has spent time working with Indigenous elders and healers in various parts of the world, including the primarily hunting-gathering Ju/'hoansi of the Kalahari Desert, the Indigenous Fijians of the South Pacific, the Sicangu Lakota of Rosebud Reservation, and the Cree and Saulteaux First Nations people of Saskatchewan. At the request of the Indigenous elders he has worked with, he seeks to bring their teachings into contact with mainstream psychology. The aim is to encourage the mainstream to be more respectful of diversity, more committed to social action, and more appreciative of the spiritual dimension in health and healing. Dr. Katz has written 7 books on culture and healing. He is currently Professor Emeritus at First Nations University of Canada and Adjunct Professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of Saskatchewan. He lives in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada.Dr. Katz can be reached at: rkatz@firstnationsuniversity.ca•••I'd love to hear what you think, so please feel free to make a comment if you're listening to this on YouTube, leave a review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or send me an email at hello@brianjames.caIf you enjoy this podcast, you might be interested in another one I've recently started called Soul Studies with Brian James, where I share readings from some of my favourite authors in the realm of spirituality and depth psychology. You can find a link to those episodes at my website http://brianjames.ca/soul-studies or search “Soul Studies with Brian James” wherever you get your podcasts.•••Support the Podcast!If you'd like to join the conversation and help support the podcast, please considering becoming a member of the growing Medicine Path tribe at patreon.com/medicinepath. You can also follow me on Instagram @revealingthesoul. I love hearing from listeners, so please feel free to reach out on social media or email me at hello@brianjames.ca•••Links:Donate: http://ko-fi.com/brianjames / http://paypal.me/medicinepathyogaPatreon: http://patreon.com/medicinepath Coaching & Books: http://brianjames.ca Yoga Courses: http://medicinepathyoga.comMusic: Royal Fern by Green House (https://green-house.bandcamp.com)
Dass Glas bei abrupten Temperatursprüngen die Tendenz hat zu zerspringen, beschäftigte lange die Glashersteller, die nach chemisch-technologischen Lösungen für diese Herausforderung suchten. Das Problem stellte sich nicht nur im Bereich des Haushalts, an den wir vielleicht zunächst denken, sondern besonders im Bereich der naturwissenschaftlichen Forschung selbst – Reagenzgläser, Kolben etc. waren mitunter starker Erhitzung oder Abkühlung unterworfen. In Europa führend im Bereich des Laborglases war die im 1837 gegründete, im tschechischen Sázava ansässige und nach ihrem Gründer František Kavalír benannte Glashütte „Kavalierglass“, die Anfang des 20. Jahrhunderts mit besonders stabilem Borosilikatglas experimentierte und dieses 1922 auf den Markt brachte. Für die Berliner Morgenpost schaut sich am 12. Februar 1922 Richard Katz in der Glashütte um und lässt sich das unzerbrechliche Glas präsentieren. Es liest Frank Riede.
It finally happened. According to the World Bank, South Korea's GDP (per capita) has surpassed Japan's since 2019. In a recent article, economist Richard Katz argues that poor productivity and lack of redistribution are behind this poor performance. In Studio CCI, he explains what South Korea does well and Japan does not, and gives reasons to hope reform is around the corner.
Die Bilder gingen um die Welt, als vor 32 Jahren der Schriftsteller und Dissident Václav Havel, nun frisch gebackener Präsident der Tschechoslowakischen Republik, die Rolling Stones auf der Prager Burg zu einem Snack empfing, um sich mit ihnen anschließend auf dem repräsentativen Balkon dem Volk zu zeigen, zu dem sein Team alledings noch nicht den Schlüssel hatte, weshalb alle durchs Fenster auf den Balkon kletterten … Damit wolle er, ließ Havel verlauten, das Ansehen dieses Balkons wieder verbessern, bzw vielleicht auch an eine Tradition anknüpfen, von der die Vossische am 24. Januar 1922 berichtet. Seit dem 14. November 1918 war Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk der erste Präsident der soeben entstandenen Tschechoslowakei und residierte auf der Prager Burg. Regelmäßig lud er Vertreter aus Kunst und Kultur zu Teegesellschaften auf den Hradschin ein und pflegte Freundschaften mit Wissenschaftler- und Schriftsteller:innen. Der Mitbegründer des Staates, selbst Gelehrter, Schriftsteller - und dann auch Politiker - war mit seiner Internationalität, Toleranz und demokratischen Überzeugung ein Aushängeschild der Ersten Republik. Gleich Havel, 70 Jahre später, gelang es ihm aber nicht die chauvinistischen Kräfte im Land zu bändigen, wie Richard Katz ganz optimistisch in seinem Zeitungsartikel noch erhofft. Es liest Frank Riede.
I've finally made it to Japan! To continue bringing consistently high-quality content to my listeners, however, I've decided to transition to a monthly publishing schedule. Thank you all for your support, and I can't wait to see what new opportunities 2022 will bring! Can't wait for more content? Check out some of this past year's interviews: Japan's Six Megatrends and Why They Matter with Richard Katz: https://anchor.fm/businesssuccessjapan/episodes/Japans-Six-Megatrends-and-Why-They-Matter-with-Richard-Katz-e17rgpm The Power of Self-Reflection, Storytelling, and Finding Authentic Balance in Japan with Tim Sullivan: https://anchor.fm/businesssuccessjapan/episodes/The-Power-of-Self-Reflection--Storytelling--and-Finding-Authentic-Balance-in-Japan-with-Tim-Sullivan-eul6jr Tackling Law, Entrepreneurship, and a Purposeful Life in Japan with Catherine O'Connell: https://anchor.fm/businesssuccessjapan/episodes/Tackling-Law--Entrepreneurship--and-a-Purposeful-Life-in-Japan-with-Catherine-OConnell-e19j77p Want to support the podcast? Check the podcast's ko-fi page to help keep me well-caffeinated and making content: https://ko-fi.com/businesssuccessjapan Be sure to follow or subscribe for more Japanese language and cultural insights. And if you enjoy the podcast, please leave a review so that other people can find it as well. And of course, if you have any questions, comments, or suggestions for future episodes, please email me at businesssuccessjapan@gmail.com. I'd love to hear from you! Leave me a voice message here: https://anchor.fm/businesssuccessjapan/message --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/businesssuccessjapan/message
Today's guest Richard Katz has worked for decades as a journalist working on the Japanese economy, and he has written two books on Japan: "The System That Soured" and "Japanese Phoenix." He is now working on a third, about how to nurture a new generation of high-growth, innovative small and medium enterprises in Japan. He has published various op-eds and essays in publications such as "Foreign Affairs," The "Financial Times," Toyo Keizai, and the "Wall Street Journal Asia." A few of the topics covered in today's conversation include the dormant entrepreneurship in Japan, the broken promises made to working women, and why structural issues around finance in Japan may be one of its greatest hindrances to growth. Today's Japanese: しかたがない shi-ka-ta ga na-i Meaning: “there's nothing that can be done,” “there's no use,” “it can't be helped” Richard's Links: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/richard-katz-937308204/ Blog: https://richardkatz.substack.com/welcome Entrepreneurial Revival In Japan: A False Spring or Real Opportunity? (UC San Diego School of Global Policy and Strategy): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Xo1LYV860g Related Episodes: Exploring and Thriving in the Changing World of Startups in Japan with Fuminori Gunji: Evolving Trends in Japanese Subsidiary Companies and the Lasting Power of Monozukuri with Francis Pacheco: https://anchor.fm/businesssuccessjapan/episodes/Evolving-Trends-in-Japanese-Subsidiary-Companies-and-the-Lasting-Power-of-Monozukuri-with-Francis-Pacheco-e14ne9c Finding Success in Japanese Universities, Startups, and Beyond with Austin Zeng: https://anchor.fm/businesssuccessjapan/episodes/Finding-Success-in-Japanese-Universities--Startups--and-Beyond-with-Austin-Zeng-e1687sh Further Reading: Why Nobody Invests in Japan: https://www.foreignaffairs.com/guest-pass/redeem/5gAlISIPRr8 Old corporate champions can't save Japan: https://www.eastasiaforum.org/2021/05/30/old-corporate-champions-cant-save-japan/ Japan's Looming Climate Showdown: https://www.foreignaffairs.com/guest-pass/redeem/rdp-a4Eil74 An Election Mandate For Growth and Redistribution: https://toyokeizai.net/articles/-/464660 Want to support the podcast? Check the podcast's ko-fi page to help keep me well-caffeinated: https://ko-fi.com/businesssuccessjapan Be sure to follow or subscribe for more Japanese language and cultural insights. And if you enjoy the podcast, please leave a review so that other people can find it as well. And of course, if you have any questions, comments, or suggestions for future episodes, please email me at businesssuccessjapan@gmail.com. I'd love to hear from you! Leave me a voice message here: https://anchor.fm/businesssuccessjapan/message --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/businesssuccessjapan/message
Need capital for your next deal? This episode covers lending options that will cover many deals in many states. You might be surprised about the short-term funds available! Plus, where are the growth markets coast to coast? And which secondary and tertiary markets should investors take a hard look at now? For more from guest Richard Katz, visit www.rodeolending.com
Need capital for your next deal? This episode covers lending options that will cover many deals in many states. You might be surprised about the short-term funds available! Plus, where are the growth markets coast to coast? And which secondary and tertiary markets should investors take a hard look at now? For more from guest Richard Katz, visit www.rodeolending.com
Subscribe to the LA Newsletter! Read Edition 7 in your browser here.Have a question about LA that you've never had a good answer to? You hear a lot from us, but we want to hear from you, too. Leave us a voicemail with a question, and we'll answer it on the show: 323-250-2106Below you can find links to all subjects discussed on LA Podcast #194.Headlines:Fatal police shootings in Santa Ana, Long Beach, and El Sereno. On Sunday, LA Sheriff's Deputies shot and killed a man in Stevenson Ranch.Governor Gavin Newsom signs several police reform bills into law.The LA City Council will soon consider an indoor vaccine mandate for many types of private businesses.Main Story:Our main story today is discussing Los Angeles' convoluted and politicized redistricting process.See proposed City Council District map K 2.5 here.Follow @UnrigLA on Twitter for more excellent information.Title Note:A reference to the chaotic conduct of the LA City Council redistricting commission, and a play on the name of commissioner Richard Katz.
In today's episode, I'm chatting with Fuminori Gunji, CEO of TokyoMate. Fuminori Gunji was a founding team member of Softbank Robotics from 2013 to 2016, leading Softbank's domestic B2B businesses and overseas expansion efforts. In 2017, Fuminori Gunji headed business development for MakeLeaps. By the end of 2018, Gunji had successfully closed MakeLeaps' M&A deal with Ricoh and went on to lead MakeLeaps in 2019 as COO. In June of 2021, Fuminori Gunji accepted the role of chief executive officer of TokyoMate, a Tokyo-based Office-as-a-Service startup providing virtual bilingual assistants, virtual mailboxes, virtual office addresses, and virtual bilingual receptionists--with the mission of “making it easier to live, work, and do business in Japan.” Topics we cover today include the shifting views of startups in Japan, structural issues that have held back innovation in Japan (and what may be changing), as well as how a few simple perspective changes can make you a more effective communicator in Japan. Today's Japanese: かおがひろい ka-o ga hi-ro-i 顔が広い Meaning: well-known, having diverse set of connections, well-connected Fuminori's Links: TokyoMate Blog: https://tokyomate.jp/blog TokyoMate Website: https://tokyomate.jp/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/fuminori-gunji-38a22589/ Related Episodes: Finding Success in Japanese Universities, Startups, and Beyond with Austin Zeng: https://anchor.fm/businesssuccessjapan/episodes/Finding-Success-in-Japanese-Universities--Startups--and-Beyond-with-Austin-Zeng-e1687sh Why You Should Found Your Startup in Kobe with Masanori Nagamine: https://anchor.fm/businesssuccessjapan/episodes/Why-You-Should-Found-Your-Startup-in-Kobe-with-Masanori-Nagamine-eotr5u How to Make it Big in Japan: Navigating Culture, Burnout, and Entrepreneurship with Misha Yurchenko: https://anchor.fm/businesssuccessjapan/episodes/How-to-Make-it-Big-in-Japan-Navigating-Culture--Burnout--and-Entrepreneurship-with-Misha-Yurchenko-et1045 Additional Reading: https://tokyomate.jp/blog/guide-to-japans-startup-ecosystem Japan as 196th (article by Richard Katz): https://toyokeizai.net/articles/-/445356 Want to support the podcast? Check the podcast's ko-fi page to help keep me well-caffeinated: https://ko-fi.com/businesssuccessjapan Be sure to follow or subscribe for more Japanese language and cultural insights. And if you enjoy the podcast, please leave a review so that other people can find it as well. And of course, if you have any questions, comments, or suggestions for future episodes, please email me at businesssuccessjapan@gmail.com. I'd love to hear from you! Leave me a voice message here: https://anchor.fm/businesssuccessjapan/message --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/businesssuccessjapan/message
Escucha este audiolibro completo aquí: https://bit.ly/libertad_audiolibroNarrado por: Irene Serrano GuerreroPatty y Walter Berglund son miembros de una nueva y floreciente clase urbana, pioneros en la recuperación de un barrio degradado. Además de madre modélica y esposa perfecta, Patty es la vecina ideal, la que sabe dónde se reciclan las pilas y cómo escoger un colegio adecuado para los niños. Junto con su marido Walter, abogado ecologista y ferviente defensor de la bicicleta, aportan su grano de arena a la construcción de un mundo mejor. Sin embargo, la llegada del nuevo milenio pone la vida de los Berglund patas arriba. Su hijo quinceañero se instala en casa de los vecinos republicanos, Walter acepta trabajar para una compañía minera, y Richard Katz, antiguo compañero de Walter, rockero extravagante y mujeriego empedernido, cobra un protagonismo insospechado en la pareja. Pero aún más desconcertante es la evolución de Patty, que de ser la figura más activa del barrio se ha transformado en una mujer ensimismada en la búsqueda de su propia felicidad. #penguinaudio #audiolibro #audiolibros #Jonathan #Franzen #JonathanFranzen See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The actor and writer Richard Katz tells us about devising work, the creative space between play and playtext and the joys of being a clown. In devised work, Richard tells us, everyone directs, and there is no power structure in which the director is in charge of a group of actors. Clowning involves being in the moment, escaping the Freudian need to ask why a character does something. This film is a fascinating insight on theatre from a performer who has worked across The Royal Shakespeare Company, Shakespeare's Globe, Complicité, Told By an Idiot and Improbable.For more details on our films and further resources, go to our website at https://abitlit.co
After receiving his Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology from Harvard, Richard Katz began a journey beyond the confines of psychology, into a world of experiences nourished by Indigenous knowledge and its emphasis on spirituality. He traveled in 1968 to the Kalahari Desert to work with the Ju/’hoansi, Indigenous peoples who, as primarily hunter-gathers, offer a view into the fundamental evolutionary roots of our human behavior. He experienced how their spiritually-infused healing energy expanded and became renewable, so, in a synergistic manner, the healing of one became the healing of all. Over the past 55 years, Katz has lived and worked with other Indigenous healers, experiencing that same spiritually nourished healing energy pervading daily life. They asked him to bring their teachings to Western health care so as to make it more appreciative of diversity, more committed to social justice, and more respectful of the importance of community and spirituality in health and healing. Katz stresses that while Indigenous knowledge is always offered freely – it cannot be sold on a fee-for-service basis – there is a cost. That knowledge has been nurtured by Indigenous peoples through centuries of colonization and oppression. To share in that knowledge we must commit ourselves to a path of service, not ego-enhancement or power; and give back to those who have been its guardians. Katz’s latest book, Indigenous Healing Psychology: Honoring the Wisdom of the First Peoples is a culmination of his work. Author royalties from that book will be given back to the Indigenous elders and healers whose teachings animate the book. Katz is presently a Professor Emeritus at the First Nations University of Canada, he can be reached at: rkatz@firstnationsuniversity.ca In this episode we discuss: Contemplative practices, popular approaches to alternative wisdom, psychedelics and indigenous healing. The irreplaceable role of community in spiritual transformation. Comparing western concepts of psychology to healing from indigenous points of view. Notions of cultural appropriation and procedures for the transmission of teachings. Orienting our purpose in passing on teachings and performing ceremonies in a context of service. Principles of allyship. The roles and responsibilities of elders. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Sports agent and attorney Richard Katz joins us on the podcast this week. He was our host's main agent over his career. Rich is the founder of Katz Management Group (www.kmgsports.com) based in Cincinnati, Ohio. Rich and John share stories of negotiations with NFL teams and more... WATCH HERE - Please Like and Subscribe! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCirs5u7xmAlfFfMgaCSnTnA https://twitter.com/Off_LinePod https://www.instagram.com/off.linepod/ VISIT https://theofflinepocast.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/offlinepod/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/offlinepod/support
CJ Liu interviews Richard Katz, MD about his book "Indigenous Healing Psychology: Honoring the Wisdom of the First People". Find out why Richard feels that psychology was less about healing and balance and more about problem finding and fixing. Richard contrasts this approach to indigenous cultures where healing had a more upbeat and authentic expression. Richard offers best practices that indigenous healers use that could be used with traditional Western practices. Fire it up with CJ Radio Show is broadcast live at Wednesday's at 4PM ET on W4WN Radio – The Women 4 Women Network (www.w4wn.com) part of Talk 4 Radio (www.talk4radio.com) on the Talk 4 Media Network (www.talk4media.com). This podcast is also available on Talk 4 Podcasting (www.talk4podcasting.com).
For centuries, Bartholomew Fair was held on the 24 August in the heart of London, and people flocked to the notorious streets of Smithfield for the fair, famous for its lawlessness, depravity and general merriment. Ben Jonson’s play Bartholomew Fair brings a cast of characters from across London together in a snapshot of London life. But the raucous comedy has a dark side, and its exploration of class, social standing and just deserts has as much to say now as it did then. It’s about to land in the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse, brought up to date for 2019. We went behind the scenes with the company – director Blanche McIntyre and actors Zach Wyatt, Josh Lacey and Richard Katz – to find out more about Bartholomew Fair and Londoner’s past and present, and to ask how much has really changed since Jonson’s Londoners partied in the streets of Smithfield?
Today it’s an honor to have Richard Katz on the podcast. Dr. Katz received his Ph.D. from Harvard University and taught there for twenty years. The author of several books, he has spent time over the past 50 years living and working with Indigenous peoples in Africa, India, the Pacific, and the Americas. He is professor emeritus at the First Nations University of Canada and an adjunct professor of psychology at the University of Saskatchewan. He lives in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. His latest book is Indigenous Healing Psychology: Honoring the Wisdom of the First Peoples. Author royalties will be given back to the Indigenous elders whose teachings made the book possible. In this episode we discuss: How being an outsider allows you to see the limitations of the world you are living in Richard’s friendship with Abraham Maslow Setting the record straight: The real influence of the Blackfeet Nation on Maslow’s theory of self-actualization How modern day psychology has oppressed the verbal-experimental paradigm The limitations of modern measurement The tension between the scientific method and the narrative approach to psychology Are all modes of the scientific process valid? How indigenous people are misunderstood, under-respected, and under-appreciated What the field of psychology could be if it incorporated indigenous ways of being Link Kalahari People’s Fund
Richard Katz, Ph.D., talks about his new book honoring the wisdom of the first peoples and the relevance of their spiritual psychology and practice for our lives today.
In this week's episode Richard Katz speaks with Joanna about: psychology might benefit from learning from indigenous people; a lifetime of learning among the First Peoples; psychology, diversity and social justice; connecting with the healing energy; spirituality as an everyday experience; humor in spirituality and psychology; healing is a journey; being open to the unexpected; respecting the Spirit; the four elements of human beings; the essence of science. The post Indigenous Healing Psychology appeared first on Future Primitive Podcasts.
Story: Es ist der wahrscheinlich gefährlichste Undercover-Auftrag der Geschichte, den Special Agent Robert Mazur Mitter der 1980er übernimmt. Er soll in der Rolle des smarten Geschäftsmannes Bob Musella das beispiellos mächtige Drogenkartell von Pablo Escobar unterwandern, der mit einer Armee von Dealern die USA mit Drogen überschwemmt und seine Geschäfte mit rücksichtsloser Gewalt absichert. Zur Seite stehen Mazur der impulsive Agent Emir Abreu und die neue Kollegin Kathy Ertz, die sich als Mazurs Verlobte ausgibt. Gemeinsam erschleichen sie sich die Freundschaft Escobars rechter Hand Roberto Alcaino, um im inneren Kreis Beweise gegen die Verbrecherorganisation und ihre Handlanger im Bankensektor zu sammeln. Bereits der kleinste Fehler kann ihn und seine Mitarbeiter das Leben kosten. DVD/Blu Ray-Release: 09.02.2017 (Universal Pictures) The Infiltrator Thriller, Krimi, Drama, Biopic Land: USA 2016 Laufzeit: ca. 127 min. FSK: 16 Regie: Brad Furman Drehbuch: Ellen Sue Brown Mit Bryan Cranston, Diane Kruger, John Leguizamo, Michael Paré, Benjamin Bratt, Amy Ryan, Joseph Gilgun, Richard Katz, Olympia Dukakis, Juliet Aubrey, ... https://youtu.be/Vg7x90_vMKo
Story: Es ist der wahrscheinlich gefährlichste Undercover-Auftrag der Geschichte, den Special Agent Robert Mazur Mitter der 1980er übernimmt. Er soll in der Rolle des smarten Geschäftsmannes Bob Musella das beispiellos mächtige Drogenkartell von Pablo Escobar unterwandern, der mit einer Armee von Dealern die USA mit Drogen überschwemmt und seine Geschäfte mit rücksichtsloser Gewalt absichert. Zur Seite stehen Mazur der impulsive Agent Emir Abreu und die neue Kollegin Kathy Ertz, die sich als Mazurs Verlobte ausgibt. Gemeinsam erschleichen sie sich die Freundschaft Escobars rechter Hand Roberto Alcaino, um im inneren Kreis Beweise gegen die Verbrecherorganisation und ihre Handlanger im Bankensektor zu sammeln. Bereits der kleinste Fehler kann ihn und seine Mitarbeiter das Leben kosten. DVD/Blu Ray-Release: 09.02.2017 (Universal Pictures) The Infiltrator Thriller, Krimi, Drama, Biopic Land: USA 2016 Laufzeit: ca. 127 min. FSK: 16 Regie: Brad Furman Drehbuch: Ellen Sue Brown Mit Bryan Cranston, Diane Kruger, John Leguizamo, Michael Paré, Benjamin Bratt, Amy Ryan, Joseph Gilgun, Richard Katz, Olympia Dukakis, Juliet Aubrey, ... https://youtu.be/Vg7x90_vMKo
On this week's podcast, the first of 2017, the Breakfasters are joined by Richard Katz, sole performer of Malthouse show 'The Encounter' and A Toot Your Horn Tuesday where Geraldine built a fence, Jeff drank a bottle of free wine and Sarah googled a phone number as well as grew some veggies. Melissa Hickey from Women's AFL comes in to talk about female footy and Sarah and Jeff talk about their holiday Earthquake experiences.
Richard Katz is a retired trial lawyer turned author. Today, he will discuss the finer points of writing and how he was able to change his career path through research and following his own personal desires. What can you do RIGHT NOW to work on making your Business more Sustainable, Transferable and Valuable in the future? Visit our Online Planning Links at www.ExitCoachRadio.com/links Sponsors: Exit & Retirement Strategies, Inc. | BEI |Jeffrey M Verdon Law Group | Albert J Rasch & Associates | Ghassemian Law Group Listening from an iPhone or iPad? Get our App in the App Store: click here
Writers Nation Radio with Hosts Kaneen Morgan and Shalanda Norman with Guest Richard Katz: Richard Katz - Attended the Maui Writer’s Conferences for 5 years from 2000-2008, including workshops with world renowned authors such as Bryce Courtney (The Power of One) and Billie Letts (Where the Heart Is). Attended a week long workshop and seminar in Screen Writing and Novel Writing in Kauai around 2005. Took a creative writing class at the College of Marin, Kentfield, CA in 2001. And took a Screen Writing class at the Academy of Art in San Francisco, CA in 2000.
Between 1978 1983, three of my four children were born, and, along with changing diapers, tripping over strollers in the front hall, and reading stories, my wife Jutta and I found ourselves in the middle of all the issues that preoccupied parents of that time. We were, broadly speaking, hippies. Two of our three children were born at home, and none of them attended primary school. (One went to university without prior schooling; the other two decided, on their own initiative, to begin their formal education with high school.) Our preferences leaned towards re-establishing the neighborly, home-made and de-professionalized form of life that our teacher and later friend Ivan Illich called the vernacular. This had arguably been the dominant tendency in the social movements that came out of the 1960's, but, at the beginning of the 1980's, times were beginning to change again. Feminism, for example, faced a crucial question. Was it arguing only for the inclusion of women on equal terms in the existing economy, with the requirement that children be institutionalized from infancy onwards in order to keep their mothers "at work"? Or would the women's movement undermine and upset the very categories of modern economic society and begin a move towards a world less focused on jobs, production, and budgeted time and, therefore, more hospitable to children? Early daycare was a big issue, because it epitomized a larger conflict: the contradiction between the nature of children and the character of the society in which they were trying to grow up. In her book The Self-Respecting Child, British writer Alison Stallibrass speaks of the developing child as having an elusive "growing tip." Where it is, at a given moment, can be detected but not predicted. Child development, in other words, occurs at its own eccentric and individual pace. It has its own cadence, and this cadence is often out of sync with the fixed routines, prescribed schedules, and programmed learning goals which must inevitably characterize most institutional care for children. This series was an attempt to vindicate this view. It drew on many of the writers that had inspired Jutta and me, including notably, and pretty extensively, John Holt, whose reader-written journal Growing Without Schooling was one of our mainstays. Parts of it were controversial. The second programme, on early daycare, was one of the few shows I ever made that provoked serious and sustained criticism from listeners. After a talk I gave to the Women's University Club of Toronto around the same time, I was accused by one of my auditors of living in Little House on the Prairie, and that pretty well sums up the tenor of the critical letters I got in response to Part Two of The World of the Child. Like-minded listeners were more enthusiastic, and cassettes of the programmes circulated widely for many years.It has been thirty-three years since these shows were broadcast, but a lot of the questions they address remain current. There are also some fascinating people to be met with here, a number of them no longer alive. These participants were as follows:Part One: Neil Postman, Neil Sutherland, David Elkind, John Lee, Jerome Kagan, Lloyd de Mause, and John HoltPart Two: Elliot Barker, PenelopeLeach, Jerome Kagan, Burton While, Otto Weininger, Louise Kaplan, and Marion ThompsonPart Three: Seymour Papert, William Condon, John Holt, Eleanor Duckworth, Jerome Kagan, Richard Katz, Otto Weininger, Stanley Greenspan, and Burton WhitePart Four: John Holt, Joseph Chilton Pearce, Valery Suransky, Seymour Papert, Alan Mirabelli, and Bob Glossop
Richard Katz - Richard is the author of "Goya's Ring: The Naked Maja Dancer" a book about the stolen Jewish paintings during WWIIMichael Grandinetti - Michael is a star illusionist and magician. You've seen him on lots of huge TV shows performing. He's here talking about his magic and where you can see him perform this summer.
Richard Katz - Richard is the author of "Goya's Ring: The Naked Maja Dancer" a book about the stolen Jewish paintings during WWIIMichael Grandinetti - Michael is a star illusionist and magician. You've seen him on lots of huge TV shows performing. He's here talking about his magic and where you can see him perform this summer.
US literary superstar Jonathan Franzen talks about his hugely acclaimed novel Freedom. An epic of contemporary love and marriage, Freedom charts the exploits of the Berglund family, capturing the temptations and burdens of liberty, the thrills of teenage lust, the frustrations of trying to change the world, and the sobering compromises of middle age. In fixing his unflinching gaze on the memorable trio of characters, Patty, Walter, and reprobate rockstar Richard Katz and on how they struggle to live in an ever more confusing world, Franzen has produced an indelible and deeply moving portrait of 21st Century America. (Photo: Jonathan Franzen. Credit: Getty Images)
Host: Jack Lewin, MD Guest: Richard Katz, MD Use of electronic medical records (EMRs) and personal health records (PHRs) can improve adherence, increase efficiency and better coordinate patient care. What role are health information exchanges playing in the integration of EMRs and PHRs, and how effective are disease management software programs? How can we meet the challenges of integrating health information technology, or HIT, tools into cardiology practices? Dr. Richard Katz, the Bloedorn Professor of Cardiology, director of the division of cardiology at George Washington University Hospital, and director of the George Washington Cardiovascular Institute in Washington, DC, discusses the opportunities to utilize existing and emerging technologies to improve patient care. Dr. Katz also offers pragmatic advice about implementing HIT systems, and reviews current HIT initiatives. Hosted by Dr. Jack Lewin. Produced in Cooperation with
Host: Jack Lewin, MD Guest: Richard Katz, MD Use of electronic medical records (EMRs) and personal health records (PHRs) can improve adherence, increase efficiency and better coordinate patient care. What role are health information exchanges playing in the integration of EMRs and PHRs, and how effective are disease management software programs? How can we meet the challenges of integrating health information technology, or HIT, tools into cardiology practices? Dr. Richard Katz, the Bloedorn Professor of Cardiology, director of the division of cardiology at George Washington University Hospital, and director of the George Washington Cardiovascular Institute in Washington, DC, discusses the opportunities to utilize existing and emerging technologies to improve patient care. Dr. Katz also offers pragmatic advice about implementing HIT systems, and reviews current HIT initiatives. Hosted by Dr. Jack Lewin. Produced in Cooperation with
Welcome to Episode 81! Learn this week's Psychiatric Secret Word from Dr. Julie (Nelson-Kuna, PhD). Our expert is Dr. Richard (Katz, PsyD) who will talk about what makes psychotherapy work. Dr. Mike (Kuna, MD) will keep you informed with Psychiatry In The News.www.KunaLand.com www.GenesisClinicalServices.com
Welcome to Episode 74! Learn this week's Psychiatric Secret Word from Dr. Julie (Nelson-Kuna, PhD). Dr. Richard (Katz, PsyD) talks about Rapid Couples Therapy. Dr. Mike (Kuna, MD) keeps you informed with Psychiatry In The News.www.GenesisClinicalServices.com www.KunaLand.com drmike@kunaland.com