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Take Back Your Time is the official handbook for TAKE BACK YOUR TIME DAY, a national event. Organizers have enlisted the support of colleges, universities, religious organizations, labor unions, businesses, activist groups, and non-profit organizations to create events that will take place across the country, calling attention to the ways overwork and lack of time affect us-at home, in our workplaces, and in our communities-and to inspire a movement to take back our time. In Take Back Your Time, well-known experts in the fields of health, family therapy and policy, community and civic…mehr
Take Back Your Time is the official handbook for TAKE BACK YOUR TIME DAY, a national event. Organizers have enlisted the support of colleges, universities, religious organizations, labor unions, businesses, activist groups, and non-profit organizations to create events that will take place across the country, calling attention to the ways overwork and lack of time affect us-at home, in our workplaces, and in our communities-and to inspire a movement to take back our time. In Take Back Your Time, well-known experts in the fields of health, family therapy and policy, community and civic involvement, the environment, and other fields examine the problems of overwork, over-scheduling, time pressure and stress and propose personal, corporate and legislative solutions. This book shows how wide-ranging the impacts of time famine in our society are, and what ordinary citizens can do to turn things around and win a more balanced life for themselves and their children.
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Autorenporträt
John de Graaf is an independent producer of award-winning television documentaries, including Affluenza and Escape from Affluenza, and is the national coordinator of Take Back Your Time Day.
Inhaltsangabe
Preface Introduction
Part One: Overwork in America 1 The Even More) Overworked American, Juliet Schor 2 An Issue for Everybody, Barbara Brandt 3 The Incredible Shrinking Vacation, Joe Robinson 4 Forced Overtime in the Land of the Free, Lonnie Golden
Part Two: Time is a Family Value 5 Overscheduled Kids, Underconnected Families, William Doherty and Barbara Carlson 6 Recapturing Childhood, Betsy Taylor 7 What about Fluffy and Fido?, Camilla H. Fox
Part Three: The Cost to Civil Society, 8 Wasted Work, Wasted Time, Jonathan Rowe 9 Time to be a Citizen, Paul Loeb 10 Time and Crime, Charles Reasons
Part Four: Health Hazard 11 An Hour a Day Could Keep the Doctor Away, Suzanne Schweiker 12 The (Bigger) Picture of Health, Stephen Bezruchka
Part Five: Environmental Consequences 13 Haste Makes Waste, David Wann 14 The Speed Trap, Robert Bernstein 15 On Time, Happiness, and Ecological Footprints, Tim Kasser and Kirk Warren Brown
Part Six: Historical and Cultural Perspectives 16 When We Had the Time, Benjamin Hunnicutt 17 Can America Learn from Shabbat?, Rabbi Arthur Waskow
Part Seven: Taking Back Your Time 18 Enough--the Time Cost of Stuff, Vicki Robin 19 The Simple Solution, Cece Andrews
Part Eight: Workplace Solutions 20 Jobs to Share, Carol Ostrom 21 A New Bottom Line, Irene Myers, Larry Gaffin, and Barbara Schramm 22 Working Retired, Beverly Goldberg 23 A Case for Sabbaticals, Bob Sessions and Lori Erickson 24 America Needs a Break, Karen Nussbaum, Christine Owens, and Carol Eickert 25 It Would be Good for Business Too, Sharon Lobel
Part Nine: Rethinking Patterns of Culture 26 Recipes for Relief, Anna Lappe 27 Time by Design, Linda Breen Pierce
Part Ten: Changing Public Policy 28 Europe's Work-Time Alternatives, Anders Hayden 29 A Policy Agenda for Taking Back Time, Jerome Segal 30 What's an Economy For?, David Korten Appendices A. Organizing Take Back Your Time Day in Your Community, Sean Sheehan B. Teach-Ins and Study Circles, Cecile Andrews C. How to Pitch (not Place) a Story, Eric Brown References About the Authors Art Credits
Part One: Overwork in America 1 The Even More) Overworked American, Juliet Schor 2 An Issue for Everybody, Barbara Brandt 3 The Incredible Shrinking Vacation, Joe Robinson 4 Forced Overtime in the Land of the Free, Lonnie Golden
Part Two: Time is a Family Value 5 Overscheduled Kids, Underconnected Families, William Doherty and Barbara Carlson 6 Recapturing Childhood, Betsy Taylor 7 What about Fluffy and Fido?, Camilla H. Fox
Part Three: The Cost to Civil Society, 8 Wasted Work, Wasted Time, Jonathan Rowe 9 Time to be a Citizen, Paul Loeb 10 Time and Crime, Charles Reasons
Part Four: Health Hazard 11 An Hour a Day Could Keep the Doctor Away, Suzanne Schweiker 12 The (Bigger) Picture of Health, Stephen Bezruchka
Part Five: Environmental Consequences 13 Haste Makes Waste, David Wann 14 The Speed Trap, Robert Bernstein 15 On Time, Happiness, and Ecological Footprints, Tim Kasser and Kirk Warren Brown
Part Six: Historical and Cultural Perspectives 16 When We Had the Time, Benjamin Hunnicutt 17 Can America Learn from Shabbat?, Rabbi Arthur Waskow
Part Seven: Taking Back Your Time 18 Enough--the Time Cost of Stuff, Vicki Robin 19 The Simple Solution, Cece Andrews
Part Eight: Workplace Solutions 20 Jobs to Share, Carol Ostrom 21 A New Bottom Line, Irene Myers, Larry Gaffin, and Barbara Schramm 22 Working Retired, Beverly Goldberg 23 A Case for Sabbaticals, Bob Sessions and Lori Erickson 24 America Needs a Break, Karen Nussbaum, Christine Owens, and Carol Eickert 25 It Would be Good for Business Too, Sharon Lobel
Part Nine: Rethinking Patterns of Culture 26 Recipes for Relief, Anna Lappe 27 Time by Design, Linda Breen Pierce
Part Ten: Changing Public Policy 28 Europe's Work-Time Alternatives, Anders Hayden 29 A Policy Agenda for Taking Back Time, Jerome Segal 30 What's an Economy For?, David Korten Appendices A. Organizing Take Back Your Time Day in Your Community, Sean Sheehan B. Teach-Ins and Study Circles, Cecile Andrews C. How to Pitch (not Place) a Story, Eric Brown References About the Authors Art Credits
Rezensionen
Take Back Your Time is a call to action for all of US who believe that the aim of a society is to benefit its people, not to maximize profits. --John Sweeney, President, AFL-CIO
This book is not about time, really; it's about power. It's about realizing our own power to be in control, not slaves to inexorable economic forces. Read this book and take a long deep sigh of relief. --Frances Moore Lappe, author of Hope's Edge and Diet for a Small Planet
Take Back Your Time documents how Americans hurried, harried lifestyles use more natural resources, generate more waste, and leave less time to care for the Earth we all share. The world and its inhabitants would breathe easier indeed if we were to slow our breathless pace. -Gaylord Nelson, Earth Day founder, former U.S. Sen and author of Beyond Earth Day: Fulfilling the Promise
makes a compelling case for the direct relationship between overwork and a host of critical social problems from physical and emotional stress to overconsumption of resources, environmental degradation and declining levels of civic participation. A tour de force! --Al Gedicks, Professor of Sociology, University of Wisconsin-La Crosse
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