2016 products were found matching your search for entitlement in 3 shops:
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Entitlement Spending Format: Paperback
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 25.63 $David Koitz clarifies misconceptions and presents the facts on the impending fiscal crisis driven by spending on Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security. Although these programs are idolized as pillars of the nation's safety net, he shows how they are in fact the largest drivers of our looming fiscal problem. Koitz explains that, if an effective remedy is to emerge, those three programs must contribute heavily to the changes lawmakers consider and offers some policy directions for dealing with them.
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Entitlement (Hardcover)
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 25.34 $Hardcover. The exhilarating new novel from the author of Leave the World Behind the book of an era (Independent)Expertly observed GUARDIANA slow-burn tale of connivance and deceit with a knockout ending OBSERVERAn engrossing exploration of the pitfalls of privilege and philanthropy SPECTATORMoney talks. But what if it lies?An ambitious young Black woman, plotting her way into the world of the one percent.An old white billionaire, facing his own extinction.Hes attracted to her intelligence, her refusal to be deferential, maybe also her Blackness.Shes drawn to his power and money and his apparent willingness to share both with her.But how far is each prepared to go to get what they think they deserve?Taut, unsettling, and alive to the seductive distortions of money, Entitlement is a biting tale for our new gilded age.*A GUARDIAN HIGHLIGHT FOR 2024*Praise for Leave the World BehindAlam is a worthy descendant of Don DeLillo SUNDAY TIMESA book that could have been tailor-made for our times THE TIMESIntense, incisive, I loved this DAVID NICHOLLSI was hooked from the opening pages CLARE MACKINTOSH From the internationally bestselling author of Leave the World Behind, a compulsive tale of money, morality and how far well go to get what we want Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability.
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Entitlement Abolition
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 37.49 $Unrest. In-fighting. Laziness. Selfishness. Lack of direction. All of these are symptoms of an all-too common American malady: entitlement. It's an epidemic transmitted by the pervasive "What's in it for me?!" mindset, a disease that has crept into just about every aspect of our society today. It's not just an ailment for the rich and wealthy-entitlement has struck across all socioeconomic levels. Whether a family has accumulated an abundance of cash or just enough to get by, the challenge is that too many families across the board suffer from a scarcity of KASH (Knowledge, Attitudes, Skills and Habits). These often well-meaning families may be adept at earning money, but they're inexperienced at cultivating Authentic Wealth. They may know how to fish, but without better guidance, they re more likely to dump the fish on their heirs than teach them how to fish. In this bold, revolutionary look at what's ailing America's families and workforces, New York Times Best Selling Author Douglas R. Andrew outlines the traps that have led to the spread of entitlement. He then shares step-by-step, practical remedies;gleaned over his more than forty years as a financial strategist and Abundant Living Coach-for abolishing entitlement; for incorporating more responsibility, accountability and ownership; for empowering families and even workgroups to be united rather than divided; and for helping people truly thrive not just today, but for generations to come. No matter where readers are on the Entitlement vs. Empowerment Spectrum, this book can be an invaluable tool for improving the well-being of their families, their businesses, and communities.
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The Entitlement Trap: How to Rescue Your Child with a New Family System of Choosing, Earning, and Ownership
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 21.23 $Dump the allowance-and use a new "Family Economy" to raise responsible children in an age of instant gratification. Number-one New York Times bestselling authors Richard and Linda Eyre, have spent the last twenty-five years helping parents nurture strong, healthy families. Now they've synthesized their vast experience in an essential blueprint to instilling children with a sense of ownership, responsibility, and self-sufficiency. At the heart of their plan is the "Family Economy" complete with a family bank, checkbooks for kids, and a system of initiative-building responsibilities that teaches kids to earn money for the things they want. The motivation carries over to ownership of their own decisions, values, and goals. Anecdotal, time-tested, and gently humorous, The Entitlement Trap challenges some of the sacred cows of parenting and replaces them with values that will save kids (and their parents) from a lifetime of dependence and disabling debt.
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Entitlement: The Paradoxes of Property
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 320.02 $In this important work of legal, political, and moral theory, Joseph William Singer offers a controversial new view of property and the entitlements and obligations of its owners. Singer argues against the conventional understanding that owners have the right to control their property as they see fit, with few limitations by government. Instead, property should be understood as a mode of organizing social relations, he says, and he explains the potent consequences of this idea.Singer focuses on the ways in which property law reflects and shapes social relationships. He contends that property is a matter not of right but of entitlement -- and entitlement, in Singer's work, is a complex accommodation of mutual claims. Property requires regulation -- property is a system and not just an individual entitlement, and the system must support a form of social life that spreads wealth, promotes liberty, , avoids undue concentration of power, and furthers justice. The author argues that owners have not only rights but obligations as well -- to other owners, to nonowners, and to the community as a whole. Those obligations ensure that property rights function to shape social relationships in ways that are both just and defensible.
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From Innocence to Entitlement: A Love And Logic Cure for the Tragedy of Entitlement
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 39.14 $Every parent needs this book! Never hear, It's not fair, or But I want it again! No more giving into your kids demands. Have the courage to say No. Stop stealing your child's potential for future happiness . Create the happy family of your dreams Entitlement- the ruination of a generation. Does your kid expect every new electronic toy and gadget, every new game, every new fashion trend, and when old enough a new car? Are you stealing your child's potential for happiness, respect, appreciation, imagination, and joy? Entitlement has become an epidemic. Yet parents think they are giving in to this disease out of love for their children. In From Innocence to Entitlement: A Love and Logic Cure for the Tragedy of Entitlement the legendary Jim Fay, and entitlement expert, Dawn Billings, take an in-depth look at the devastation and destruction of entitlement and provide techniques for preventing and curing the problem.
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The Age of Entitlement: America Since the Sixties
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 58.42 $A major American intellectual makes the historical case that the reforms of the 1960s, reforms intended to make the nation more just and humane, instead left many Americans feeling alienated, despised, misled—and ready to put an adventurer in the White House.Christopher Caldwell has spent years studying the liberal uprising of the 1960s and its unforeseen consequences. Even the reforms that Americans love best have come with costs that are staggeringly high—in wealth, freedom, and social stability—and that have been spread unevenly among classes and generations. Caldwell reveals the real political turning points of the past half century, taking readers on a roller-coaster ride through Playboy magazine, affirmative action, CB radio, leveraged buyouts, iPhones, Oxycontin, Black Lives Matter, and internet cookies. In doing so, he shows that attempts to redress the injustices of the past have left Americans living under two different ideas of what it means to play by the rules. Essential, timely, hard to put down, The Age of Entitlement is a brilliant and ambitious argument about how the reforms of the past fifty years gave the country two incompatible political systems—and drove it toward conflict.
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Beyond Entitlement
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 64.00 $Examines the effects of social welfare policies and argues that the poor should be entitled to benefits only if they fulfill the responsibilities of citizenship
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On Borrowed Time: How the Growth in Entitlement Spending Threatens America's Future
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 64.00 $Clears up misconceptions about entitlement spending, argues that it will become an overwhelming burden on future workers
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Enraged, Rattled, and Wronged: Entitlement's Response to Social Progress
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 40.58 $Book is in Used-VeryGood condition. Pages and cover are clean and intact. Used items may not include supplementary materials such as CDs or access codes. May show signs of minor shelf wear and contain very limited notes and highlighting. 0.82
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On Borrowed Time: How the Growth in Entitlement Spending Threatens America's Future
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 62.37 $Entitlements represent one of the largest and fastest-growing portions of the federal budget. They are regarded as sacrosanct by lawmakers, yet many people see them as one of the greatest threats to the American Dream. T his volume argues that by sacrificing the future in order to pay ever-larger federal benefits through programs such as Social Security, Medicare, and federal pensions, entitlement spending has become a crushing burden to American workers. Peterson and Howe destroy myths surrounding entitlement spending. They show that the bulk of it does not go to the poor. The majority of the elderly are not needy and dependent. Entitlement programs, not defense spending, consume the largest share of the federal budget. In short, we cannot balance the budget without reducing entitlement spending. In a country that demands critical investments--improving public education, alleviating poverty, increasing professional opportunity--growth in entitlement spending is unaffordable. On Borrowed Time is an important and timely book that will be mandatory reading for policymakers, politicians, economists, and a general public concerned with its financial future.
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The Right to Be Helped: Deviance, Entitlement, and the Soviet Moral Order (NIU Series in Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies)
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 5.41 $"Doesn't an educated person―simple and working, sick and with a sick child―doesn't she have the right to enjoy at least the crumbs at the table of the revolutionary feast?" Disabled single mother Maria Zolotova-Sologub raised this question in a petition dated July 1929 demanding medical assistance and a monthly subsidy for herself and her daughter. While the welfare of able-bodied and industrially productive people in the first socialist country in the world was protected by a state-funded insurance system, the social rights of labor-incapacitated and unemployed individuals such as Zolotova-Sologub were difficult to define and legitimize. The Right to Be Helped illuminates the ways in which marginalized members of Soviet society understood their social rights and articulated their moral expectations regarding the socialist state between 1917 and 1950. Maria Galmarini-Kabala shows how definitions of state assistance and who was entitled to it provided a platform for policymakers and professionals to engage in heated debates about disability, gender, suffering, and productive and reproductive labor. She explores how authorities and experts reacted to requests for support, arguing that responses were sometimes characterized by an enlightened nature and other times by coercive discipline, but most frequently by a combination of the two. By focusing on the experiences of behaviorally problematic children, unemployed single mothers, and blind and deaf adults in several major urban centers, this important study shows that the dialogue over the right to be helped was central to defining the moral order of Soviet socialism. It will appeal to scholars and students of Russian history, as well as those interested in comparative disabilities and welfare studies.
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Misogyny in English Departments: Obligation, Entitlement, Gaslighting (Equity in Higher Education Theory, Policy, and Praxis, 17)
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 50.21 $Book is in Used-Good condition. Pages and cover are clean and intact. Used items may not include supplementary materials such as CDs or access codes. May show signs of minor shelf wear and contain limited notes and highlighting. 0.65
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Poverty and Famines: An Essay on Entitlement and Deprivation
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 54.79 $This book focuses on the causes of starvation in general and famines in particular. The traditional analysis of famines is shown to be fundamentally defective, and the author develops an alternative analysis.
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Food Security in South Africa: Human Rights and Entitlement Perspectives
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 27.96 $The right to food is guaranteed in South Africa’s Constitution as it is in international law. Yet food insecurity remains widespread and persistent, at levels much higher than in countries with similar levels of per capita GDP and development, such as Brazil. In this book, leading local and international researchers on food security and related policy work have come together to create the first systematic and trans-disciplinary analysis of food security and its multiple dimensions in South Africa and the southern African region.
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Wounded Leaders: British Elitism and the Entitlement Illusion - A Psychohistory
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 44.11 $400 pages. 9.21x5.98x1.26 inches. In Stock.
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Right to Be Helped : Deviance, Entitlement, and the Soviet Moral Order
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 52.21 $"Doesn't an educated person―simple and working, sick and with a sick child―doesn't she have the right to enjoy at least the crumbs at the table of the revolutionary feast?" Disabled single mother Maria Zolotova-Sologub raised this question in a petition dated July 1929 demanding medical assistance and a monthly subsidy for herself and her daughter. While the welfare of able-bodied and industrially productive people in the first socialist country in the world was protected by a state-funded insurance system, the social rights of labor-incapacitated and unemployed individuals such as Zolotova-Sologub were difficult to define and legitimize. The Right to Be Helped illuminates the ways in which marginalized members of Soviet society understood their social rights and articulated their moral expectations regarding the socialist state between 1917 and 1950. Maria Galmarini-Kabala shows how definitions of state assistance and who was entitled to it provided a platform for policymakers and professionals to engage in heated debates about disability, gender, suffering, and productive and reproductive labor. She explores how authorities and experts reacted to requests for support, arguing that responses were sometimes characterized by an enlightened nature and other times by coercive discipline, but most frequently by a combination of the two. By focusing on the experiences of behaviorally problematic children, unemployed single mothers, and blind and deaf adults in several major urban centers, this important study shows that the dialogue over the right to be helped was central to defining the moral order of Soviet socialism. It will appeal to scholars and students of Russian history, as well as those interested in comparative disabilities and welfare studies.
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Stop Moaning Start Owning: How Entitlement Is Ruining America And How Personal Responsibility Can Fix It
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 75.13 $In this long-overdue book, Dr. Brian Russell exposes the complaints that have the most destructive effects on Americans and, by extension, on America today. First, he helps us understand the damage we have done to ourselves, our relationships, kids, careers, and our country by misunderstanding what "the pursuit of happiness" really means, failing to differentiate wants from needs, and externalizing blame for our own failures. In the second part he explains how we got so off-track, leading to an "Age of Entitlement," and the "saving grace" that calls us back to personal responsibility. He then reveals how so many of us have abdicated personal responsibility and, consequently, power over our lives. Finally, we learn how to engage in transformative change by embracing and encouraging personal accountability and responsibility. Dr. Russell empowers us to reassert control over our individual and collective destinies and teaches us how to leverage the transformative power of life's "perspective-preserver": gratitude.
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The Temptation of Innocence: Living in the Age of Entitlement
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 41.84 $A highly insightful essay on the culture of dependency and its damaging effects on the moral fiber of society; from corporate welfare to affirmative action, the author takes on the culture of copping out. A book against depression, existential angst, cry-babies and whining "victims," either acting as a child in a candy store or as a martyr of one's own fears. Men against women, women against men, isn't it time to grow up and take charge of our own destiny?
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Sweet Charity?: Emergency Food and the End of Entitlement
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 22.07 $In this era of eroding commitment to government sponsored welfare programs, voluntarism and private charity have become the popular, optimistic solutions to poverty and hunger. The resurgence of charity has to be a good thing, doesn't it? No, says sociologist Janet Poppendieck, not when stopgap charitable efforts replace consistent public policy, and poverty continues to grow.In Sweet Charity?, Poppendieck travels the country to work in soup kitchens and "gleaning" centers, reporting from the frontlines of America's hunger relief programs to assess the effectiveness of these homegrown efforts. We hear from the "clients" who receive meals too small to feed their families; from the enthusiastic volunteers; and from the directors, who wonder if their "successful" programs are in some way perpetuating the problem they are struggling to solve. Hailed as the most significant book on hunger to appear in decades, Sweet Charity? shows how the drive to end poverty has taken a wrong turn with thousands of well-meaning volunteers on board.
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