After Identity: Rethinking Race, Sex, and Gender (Contemporary Political Theory)

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Price: (as of – Details) Social and political theorists have traced in detail how individuals come to possess gender, sex

Quietly Spectacular: Rethinking Success on Your Own Terms

Original price was: $18.95.Current price is: $0.99.
Price: (as of – Details) What if success didn’t look like what the world told you it should? What if

Rethinking Economic Growth: How Small Businesses Can Help Consistently Grow the Economy

Original price was: $24.95.Current price is: $9.99.
Price: (as of – Details) SMALL BUSINESSES ARE THE CORNERSTONE OF AMERICAN ECONOMIC GROWTH.So why are we failing them? It

Rethinking Reputation: How PR Trumps Marketing and Advertising in the New Media World

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Price: (as of – Details) Good public relations is no longer just icing – it’s a strategic imperative more important

Rethinking Success: Eight Essential Practices for Finding Meaning in Work and Life – A Holistic Guide to Professional Fulfillment and Personal Values

Original price was: $27.99.Current price is: $20.65.
Price: (as of – Details) The founder and CEO of Path North, Georgetown University professor, and former White House advisor

Sacred Freedom: Rethinking Marriage, Desire, and Faith — Escaping the Sexual Shame of Evangelical Purity Culture

Original price was: $11.99.Current price is: $9.69.
Price: (as of – Details) If you’ve prayed, confessed, and done everything right—but your desire for other women never went

Stop Settling, Settle Smart: Rethinking Work-life Balance, Redesign Your Busy Life

$14.51
Price: (as of – Details) Work-life “balance” is a myth. Throughout our lives we’ve been sold a bill of goods

The Work-Life Balance Myth: Rethinking Your Optimal Balance for Success

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Price: (as of – Details) “All of us have Seven Slices in our lives: our Family Slice, our Professional Slice,

Valuing Children: Rethinking the Economics of the Family (The Family and Public Policy)

$14.62
Price: (as of – Details) Nancy Folbre challenges the conventional economist’s assumption that parents have children for the same reason