Minority MBA.

Minority MBA.
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 104
Release: 2004
Genre: Minority business enterprises
ISBN:

MBA

MBA
Author: Carter A. Daniel
Publisher: Bucknell University Press
Total Pages: 350
Release: 1998
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780838753620

In the early years, the main struggle was to achieve a legitimate place for MBA programs in the hostile universities, where the idea of teaching a practical and mercenary subject like commerce seemed to educators nothing short of appalling. Once the programs found acceptance, moreover, business education had to face yet another struggle: figuring out what to teach.

Ensuring Minority Success in Corporate Management

Ensuring Minority Success in Corporate Management
Author: Donna E. Thompson
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 390
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1468455176

To be a corporate executive in America is to achieve a universally recognized measure of personal and professional success. The high income, privilege, prestige, and authority enjoyed by most corporate executives all attest to "making it." That is why the advancement of racial and ethnic minorities into the executive suite is one of the key barometers of the nation's progress toward full equality of opportunity. But the quest for equal opportunity in corporate management has been difficult and frustrating. Black, Hispanic, and Asian men and women are rarely found among those who run or significantly influence the direction of American corporations. The wide gap between the expectation and the reality is a continuing topic of interest to business leaders and racial and ethnic minorities, as well as to scholars of the business scene. This book edited by Thompson and DiTomaso contributes significantly to our understanding of this problem, and, most importantly, provides useful guidelines on what to do about it. Interest in the diversity of corporate management comes at a time of unprecendented challenge to United States success in the world economy. American business must now compete against aggressive producers and fi nanciers in Western Europe and Japan. More competition also has emerged from some of the rapidly developing countries in Latin America and the Pacific Rim. Our ability to design, manufacture, sell, and export goods and services in a global marketplace will increasingly determine our standard of living and prominence on the world stage.