There’s no need to pray for more hours in your day! In this updated edition, Jordan draws on Proverbs 31 to offer spiritual guidance and practical tips for women who want to live a more balanced and productive life. Discover how to use time-saving electronic and Internet tools, streamline grocery shopping and meal planning, and more.
In her first book, "12 Steps to Becoming a More Organized Woman," Lane Jordan provided women of all ages with hundreds of time-saving tips and biblical advice on how to organize, manage, and balance their life and family roles. Now she shares her insight and experience on how to be an exceptional mom. Demonstrating why everything a mom does can be a benefit to family and loved ones, Jordan helps busy mothers discern what is really important--and what isn't--and become more effective for God's kingdom. Readers will discover how to be more organized, reduce stress, and gain more time to grow into the women God intends. Includes practical hints on managing time wisely, smart meal preparation, having fun with your kids, education, disciplining children with love, maintaining emotional and spiritual health, and much more. An excellent resource for a Bible study or small group Chapters include: - Seek God First - Manage the Time? - Provide Healthy, Satisfying Food - Spend T.I.M.E. Together - Teach your Children Well - Discipline You Children in Love - Manage Your Work and Work Your Finances - Recover Your Sense of Self - Restore Your Body - Renew Your Mind - Revive Your Spirit - Build a Strong Family
Recent work in comparative political economy has generated a host of alternative explanations for variation in national economic performance--institutional sclerosis, flexible specialization, governance relations, etc. In each case, these explanations have trouble accounting for more than a handful of instances. In Search of National Economic Success uses detailed case studies with statistical analysis to comparatively assess the "market liberal" belief in free markets, limited government, and the tradeoff between economic efficiency and social justice. Lane Kenworthy argues that the key to economic success lies in combining competition with cooperation. Among advanced industrialized nations, the countries achieving the best economic performance results over the past three decades have been the most committed to combining competition and cooperation. Those faring the worst rely predominantly on atomistic, individualistic competition. In the end, the comparative record strongly supports a focus on cooperation-inducing institutions. This volume will prove invaluable to scholars and students in comparative politics, international political economy, and comparative economics. "[This volume] presents an alternative explanation of the cross-national variation in performance, arguing that national economic success lies in combining competition with cooperation." --Journal of Economic Literature
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