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One Size Fits None: Time for an Entrepreneurial Revolution
Barnes and Noble
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One Size Fits None: Time for an Entrepreneurial Revolution in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $32.00

Barnes and Noble
One Size Fits None: Time for an Entrepreneurial Revolution in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $32.00
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
Existing innovation and funding models will not work to fight the effects of climate change – people cannot rely on topdown global initiatives to save us.
One Size Fits None
provides both an analysis and a path forward, advocating for collaborative, bottomup solutions as indispensable for navigating today’s “comorbid” crises effectively. It argues that only by breaking open obstacles to broadbased entrepreneurship, both within and outside of existing organizations, can we break free from fossil fuel dependency and mitigate the spread of grievance culture and deepening global inequality.
The book’s aim is to spur discussions and conversations among leaders of governments, businesses, NGOs, and universities about the systemic connections in a set of separate crises we’re all facing. By introducing case studies and realworld alternatives, the authors aim to generate practical experiments that depart from topdown approaches that have been failing to address these crises.
is for everyone asking what’s keeping our institutions from addressing the demand for opportunities to innovate our ways out of the present debacle—and what can be done about it.
One Size Fits None
provides both an analysis and a path forward, advocating for collaborative, bottomup solutions as indispensable for navigating today’s “comorbid” crises effectively. It argues that only by breaking open obstacles to broadbased entrepreneurship, both within and outside of existing organizations, can we break free from fossil fuel dependency and mitigate the spread of grievance culture and deepening global inequality.
The book’s aim is to spur discussions and conversations among leaders of governments, businesses, NGOs, and universities about the systemic connections in a set of separate crises we’re all facing. By introducing case studies and realworld alternatives, the authors aim to generate practical experiments that depart from topdown approaches that have been failing to address these crises.
is for everyone asking what’s keeping our institutions from addressing the demand for opportunities to innovate our ways out of the present debacle—and what can be done about it.
Existing innovation and funding models will not work to fight the effects of climate change – people cannot rely on topdown global initiatives to save us.
One Size Fits None
provides both an analysis and a path forward, advocating for collaborative, bottomup solutions as indispensable for navigating today’s “comorbid” crises effectively. It argues that only by breaking open obstacles to broadbased entrepreneurship, both within and outside of existing organizations, can we break free from fossil fuel dependency and mitigate the spread of grievance culture and deepening global inequality.
The book’s aim is to spur discussions and conversations among leaders of governments, businesses, NGOs, and universities about the systemic connections in a set of separate crises we’re all facing. By introducing case studies and realworld alternatives, the authors aim to generate practical experiments that depart from topdown approaches that have been failing to address these crises.
is for everyone asking what’s keeping our institutions from addressing the demand for opportunities to innovate our ways out of the present debacle—and what can be done about it.
One Size Fits None
provides both an analysis and a path forward, advocating for collaborative, bottomup solutions as indispensable for navigating today’s “comorbid” crises effectively. It argues that only by breaking open obstacles to broadbased entrepreneurship, both within and outside of existing organizations, can we break free from fossil fuel dependency and mitigate the spread of grievance culture and deepening global inequality.
The book’s aim is to spur discussions and conversations among leaders of governments, businesses, NGOs, and universities about the systemic connections in a set of separate crises we’re all facing. By introducing case studies and realworld alternatives, the authors aim to generate practical experiments that depart from topdown approaches that have been failing to address these crises.
is for everyone asking what’s keeping our institutions from addressing the demand for opportunities to innovate our ways out of the present debacle—and what can be done about it.















