Uinion Institute & University UI&U Home UI&U Contact Info

UI&U Home

Laura's Home Page

Professional/Business Development

Resume

Business Bibliography

Matching Studies to Degree Criteria

Study Guides

Presentation

Email Me

Vermont College Undergraduate Program

Contact UI&U

Business Bibliography

Please note: Some of the titles are listed in APA style (such as Bob Adams’

 and some are listed in MLA style (such as Lotte Bailyn’s)

 Adams, Bob.  (1996).  Small business start-up: Your comprehensive guide to starting and managing a business.  Massachusetts: Adams Media Corporation. 

 Ash, M.  (1995).  Mary Kay: You can have it all.  U.S.A.: Prima Publishing

 Bailyn, Lotte. Breaking the Mold. New York:  MacMillan Inc., 1993.

 Baritz, Loren. The Good Life:  The Meaning of Success for the American Middle Class.

     New York:  Alfred A. Knopf, 1989.

 Beardsley, Tom. Willimantic Women:Their Lives and Labors. Willimantic, CT:

     Windham Textile and History Museum, Inc.,  1990.

 Belenky, M.F., Lynne Bond and Jacqueline S. Weinstock. A Tradition That Has No  

     Name:  Nurturing the Development of People, Families and Communities. New

     York:  HarperCollins, 1997.           

 Belenky, M.F. et al. Women’s Ways of Knowing. New York:  Basic Books, 1986.

 Berglas, Dr. Steven. Reclaiming the Fire:  How Successful People Overcome Burnout, Random

     House, New York.  2001.

 Blau, Francine D. and Ronald G. Ehrenberg (editors). Gender & Family Issues in the

     Workplace. New York:  The Russell Sage Foundation, 1997.

 Briskin, Alan. The Stirring of the Soul in the Workplace, Berrett-Koehler Publishers, Inc., San

     Francisco, CA, 1998.

Browne, M. Neil and Keeley, Stuart.  Asking the Right Questions:  A Guide to Critical Thinking.

      New York:  Prentice Hall PTR, 2000.

 Carter, S. & Connon, T.  Women as entrepreneurs: A study of female business owners, their

      motivations, experiences and strategies for success.  London: Academic Press.

 Cochran, Thomas C. Challenges to American Values:  Society, Business and Religion.

     New York:  Oxford University Press, 1985.

 Coles, Robert and Jane Hallowell Coles -(a). Women of Crisis:  Lives of Struggle and

     Hope. New York:  Delacorte, 1978.

 ________(b).Women of Crisis II:  Lives of Work and Dreams. New York:  Delacorte,

     1990.

 Collins, Randall and Scott Coltrane. Sociology of Marriage and the Family:  Gender,

     Love and Property, Third Edition, Chicago:  Nelson - Hall Inc. Publishers, 1991.

 Coontz, Stephanie. The Way We Really Are:  Coming to Terms With America’s

     Changing Families. New York:  Basic Books, 1997.

 Dana, Daniel. Managing Differences:  How to Build Better Relationships at Work and

     Home. Overland Park, KN:  MTI Publications, 1997.

 Edin, Katherine and Laura Lein. Making Ends Meet. New York:  Russell Sage

     Foundation, 1997.

 Edwards, Paul and Sarah. The Best Home Businesses for the 21st Century. New York: Penguin

      Putnam, 1999.

 _______. Working From Home . New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1990.

 Ferguson, Susan J.. Shifting the Center:  Understanding Contemporary Families.

      Mountain View, CA:  Mayfield Publishing, 1998.

 Freeman, Sue J. M., Susan C. Bourque, and Christine M. Shelton, eds.  Women On Power:

       Leadership Redefined.  Boston, MA:  Northeastern University Press, 2001.

 Friedan, Betty, Brigid O’Farrell (editor). Beyond Gender:  The New Politics of Work and

      Family. New York:  Woodrow Wilson Center Press, 1997.

 Gaines, Jr.,Stanley O.. Culture Ethnicity and Personal Relationship Processes. New

     York:  Routledge, 1997.

 Gerber, Michael E. The E Myth Revisited. New York: Harper Collins Business, 1995.

 Geus, Arie de. The Living Company:  Habits for Survival in a Turbulent Business Environment.

     Harvard Business School Press, Boston, MA. 2002.

 Gilbert, Dennis.The American Class Structure. New York:  Wadsworth Publishing

     Company,  1998.

 Goldberg, N., B. Clinchy and M. Belenky. Knowledge, Difference, and Power:  Essays

     Inspired by‘Women's Ways of Knowing’. New York:  HarperCollins, 1997.

 Goldman, Anne.E. Take My Word:  Autobiographical Innovations of Ethnic American

     Working Women. San Francisco:  University of California Press, 1996.

 Gross, D.  (1996).  Forbes greatest business stories of all time: 20 inspiring tales of

     entrepreneurs who changed the way we live and do business.  New York: John Wiley & Sons.

 Gutman, Herbert G. Work, Culture and Society In Industrializing America. New York:

      Vintage Books, 1997.

 Hagen, O. Rivchum, C. & Sexton, D.  (1989).  Women-owned businesses.  New York: Praeger.

 Henslin, James A.. Sociology: A Down to Earth Approach, Third Edition. (Annotated

     Instructor’s Edition), Boston:  Allyn and Bacon, 1997.

 Hesselbein,F., M. Goldsmith and R. Beckhard ed. The Organization of the Future,

     New York:  Jossey-Bass, 1997.

 Hewlett, Sylvia Ann.When the Bough Breaks. New York:  Basic Book, 1991.

 Hochschild, Arlie Russell (a). The Second Shift. New York:  Avon Books, 1989.

 ________ (b).The Time Bind:  When Work Becomes Home and Home Becomes Work.

      New York:  Metropolitan Books,  1997.

 Hollis, James. The Middle Passage:  From Misery to Meaning in Midlife,

     Inner City Books, Toronto, Canada, 1993.

 Iacocca, L. and W. Novak, Iacocca, New York, NY:  Bantam  1984.

  Jeruchim, J. & Shapiro, P.  (1992).  Women, mentors, and success.  New York: Fawcett

      Columbine.

 Jessup, C. & Chipps, G.  (1991).  The woman’s guide to starting a business: Third edition.  New

      York: Henry Holt and Company.

 Johnson, Allan G.. The Forest and the Trees:  Sociology as Life, Practice and Promise.

     Philadelphia:  Temple University Press, 1997.

 Jones, Jacqueline. Labor of Love, Labor of Sorrow:  Black Women, Work and the

     Family From Slavery to the Present. New York:  Random House, 1995.

 Kaltreider, Nancy B., Md. (editor). Dilemmas of a Double Life:  Women Balancing

     Careers and Relationships (Gender in Crisis). New York:  Jason Aronson, 1997.

 Kanter, Rosabeth Moss. Men and Women of the Corporation. New York:  Basic Books,

     1993.

 Keita, Gwendolyn Puryear and Joseph J. Hurrell, Jr.(editors). Job Stress in a

     Changing Workforce:  Investigating Gender, Diversity, and Family Issues.

     Washington D.C.:  American Psychological Association, 1996.

 Kennedy, Susan. If All We Did Was to Weep at Home:  A History of White Working-

     class Women in America. Bloomington, ID:  Indiana University Press, 1979.

 Kessler-Harris, Alice. A Woman’s Wage. Lexington, Kentucky:  University Press of

     Kentucky,  1990. 

 King, L.  (1989).  Women of power.  California: Celestial Arts.

 Lauder, E.  (1985).  Estee: A success story.  New York: Random House

 Lesonsky, R.  (1998).  Entrepreneur magazine’s start your own business: The only start-up book

      you’ll ever need.  California: Entrepreneur Media Inc. 

 Levine, P. What Work Is.  New York: Knopf, Inc., 1991.

Levinson, Jay Conrad. Guerrilla Marketing: Secrets for Making Big Profits from Your Small Business. Houghton Mifflin Company: Boston, 1998.

 _______. Guerrilla Marketing Attack: New Strategies, Tactics and Weapons for Winning Big Profits from Your Small Business. Houghton Mifflin Company: Boston, 1989.

 _______. Guerrilla Marketing Excellence: The Fifty Golden Rules for Small-Business Success.

       Houghton Mifflin Company: New York, 1993.

 Lewis, Michael. The Culture of Inequality.  Second Edition, with a new introduction. 

     Amherst:  University of Massachusetts, 1978.

 Luttrell, Wendy, Schoolsmart and Motherwise:  Working Class Women’s Identity and

     Schooling (Perspective on Gender). New York:  Routledge Publication, 1997.

 Macdonald, Anne L.. Feminine Ingenuity, New York:  Ballantine Books, 1992.

 Mindell, P. Ed.D.  (2001).  How to say it for Women: Communicating with confidence and power

      using the language of success.  New Jersey: Prentice Hall Press.

 Macionis, John J.. Sociology, Sixth Edition. New York:  Prentis-Hall,  1997.

 Moen, Phyllis. Women’s Two Roles:  A Contemporary Dilemma. New York:  Auburn

     House Publication, 1992.

 Neft, Naomi and Ann D. Levine.  Where Women Stand:  An International Report on the

     Status of Women in 140 Countries 1997+98. New York:  Random House, 1997.

 Nelson, J. W. III. & Couto, K.  (2001).  The Plan: A step-by-step, start-to-finish, anyone-can-do-

     it business plan guidebook.  Connecticut: New Ground Publications.

 Omi, Michael, and Howard Winant. Racial Formation in the United States:  from the

     1960s to the 1990s. New York, London:  Routledge, 1994.

 Peters, Joan K., When Mothers Work:  Loving our Children Without Sacrificing

     Ourselves. Reading, MA:  Addison Wesley, 1997.

 Plitt, J.  (2000).  Martha Matilda Harper and the American dream: How one woman changed the

      face of modern business.  U.S.A.: Syracuse University Press.

 Press and Townsley. “Wives’ and Husbands’ Housework Reporting:  Gender, Class

     and Social Desirability” Gender and Society.  12, 2 (April 1998) 188 -218.

 Reskin, Barbara F., Irene Padavic. Women and Men at Work, Thousand Oaks, CA:

     Pine Forge Press 1994.

 Rodgers, Daniel T. The Work Ethic in Industrial America. Chicago:  University of

     Chicago Press, 1979.

 Roddick, A.  (1991).  Anita Roddick: Body and soul.  New York: Crown Trade Paperbacks.

 Roediger, David R. The Wages of Whiteness:  Race and the Making of the American

     Working Class, New York, London:  Verso, 1991.

 Roiphe, Anne. Fruitful, New York:  Houghton Mifflin, 1996.

 Rubin, Lillian (a). Families on the Fault Line: America’s Working Class Speaks About

     the Family, the Economy, Race and Ethnicity. New York:  Harperenial, 1991.

 ________ (b). Worlds of Pain:  Life in the Working-Class Family. New York:  Basic

      Books, 1976.

 Russo, J. Edward and Schoemaker, Paul J. H. Winning Decisions. New York:  Doubleday &

     Company, Incorporated. 2002.

 Schein, Edgar H. The Corporate Culture Survival Guide:  Sense and Nonsense About Culture

    Change.  New York:  Jossey-Bass Inc., Publishers, 1999.

 _______.  Organizational Culture and Leadership.  New York:  Jossey-Bass Inc., Publishers, 1992.

 Schein, Virginia E..Working From The Margins. New York:  ILR Press/Cornell

     University Press, 1995.

 Schmidt, W.H., J.P.Finnegan. TQManger: A Practical Guide for Managing in a Total

     Quality Organization.  San Francisco:  Jossey-Bass, 1993.

 Seifer, Nancy. Nobody Speaks for Me:  Self Portraits of American Working Class

     Women. New York:  Simon and Schuster, 1976.

 Sidel, Ruth. Urban Survival:  The World of Working Class Women. NB:  University of

     Nebraska Press, 1995.

 Sloane, A. Hoffa, Cambridge, MA:  The MIT Press,  1993.

 Spain, Daphne and Suzanne M. Bianchi. Balancing Act:  Motherhood, Marriage and

     Employment Among American Women. New York:  Russell Sage, 1996.

 Stacey, Judith. In The Name of the Family:  Rethinking Family Values in the Post

     modern Age. Boston, MA:  Beacon Press, 1996.

 

________. Brave New Families (1990) (with a new preface 1998.) Los Angeles:  University of California Press,  1998.

 Stromberg, Ann Helton and Shirley Harkess. Women Working.  Mountain View, CA:

     Mayfield Publishing Company.  1988.

 Tannen, Deborah., Talking 9 - 5:  Women and Men in the Workplace:  Language, Sex

     and Power. New York:  Avon Books, 1995.

 Taylor, R.  (1988).  Exceptional entrepreneural women: Strategies for success.  New York:

     Praeger.

 Terkel, Studs.  Working.  New York:  The New Press, 1974.

U.S.Department of Labor Women’s Bureau. Earning Differences Between Women and

      Men. (No, 93-5). Washington D.C.:  U.S.Dept. of Labor Women’s Bureau,1993.

 Vance, Michael, and Diane Deacon.  Think Out of the Box.  Franklin Lakes, NJ: Career Press,

      Inc.  1995.

 Walsh, Elsa. Divided Lives:  The Public and Private Struggles of Three American

       Women. New York:  Doubleday, 1995.

 Whyte, David. Crossing the Unknown Sea:  Work as a Pilgrimage of Identity,

     Berkeley Publishing Group, New York, 2001.

 _______ . The Heart Aroused:  Poetry and Preservation of the Soul in Corporate

     America. New York:  Doubleday, 1994.

 Winton, Chester. Frameworks for Studying Families. New York:  Dushkin Publishing

     Group, 1995.

 NOTE: You may also find a good bibliography on Economics on Martha VanderWolk’s web site, http://faculty.tui.edu/vanderwolkm

Union Institute & University   |   440 E. McMillan Street   |   Cincinnati, OH 45206-1925   |   1.800.486.3116

DISCLAIMER: The above is a personal web page managed and maintained by each faculty member. The purpose of this page is to provide information about the faculty member's current activities and interests. For the official and complete faculty curriculum vitae please go to the faculty directory.

Copyright 2001, 2002 © Union Institute & University