Herbert Kaufman: 5 books

Book cover of The Forest Ranger

The Forest Ranger

A Study in Administrative Behavior

by Herbert Kaufman
Language: English
Release Date: September 30, 2010

It is the rare book that remains in print for nearly fifty years, earning wide acclaim as a classic. The Forest Ranger has been essential reading for generations of professionals and scholars in forestry, public administration, and organizational behavior who are interested in the administration of...
Book cover of Red Tape

Red Tape

Its Origins, Uses, and Abuses

by Herbert Kaufman
Language: English
Release Date: June 8, 2015

Death, taxes, and red tape. The inevitable trio no one can escape. That wry sense of reality colors Herbert Kaufman's classic study of red tape, the bureaucratic phenomenon that all of us have encountered in some form-from the confounding tax form filled out annually to the maddeningly time-consuming...
Book cover of The Limits of Organizational Change
by Herbert Kaufman
Language: English
Release Date: July 12, 2017

The environment of modern organizations is so complex and volatile that we take for granted that organizational change is necessary for organizational survival. Yet the literature on organizations has for years described manifold obstacles to such change. First published in 1971, this book extracts...
Book cover of The Clock That Had No Hands

The Clock That Had No Hands

And Other Essays About Advertising

by Herbert Kaufman
Language: English
Release Date: August 1, 2009

Advertising is to business, what hands are to a clock. It is a direct and certain means of letting the public know what you are doing. In these days of intense and vigilant commercial contest, a dealer who does not advertise is like a clock that has no hands.
Book cover of Lucky to Be Here
by Herbert L. Kaufman
Language: English
Release Date: October 20, 2003

Lucky To Be Here recounts the absurdity, sadness and delight of a Jewish familys life in America during the turbulent years of World War II. In Toledo, Ohio, Werner Auerbachs impressions of his new surroundings and his Americanization are related alternately through the boys diary and the narrators...
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