
I have had my hands full this holiday season (Las Octavitas). My youngest daughter Adys Ann received this adorable puppy, who she has named Nugget, on Three Kings Day.

I have had my hands full this holiday season (Las Octavitas). My youngest daughter Adys Ann received this adorable puppy, who she has named Nugget, on Three Kings Day.
I teach a survey course on the legal and ethical environments of business, and one of the most challenging aspects of teaching such a course is that business law encompasses almost every area of law. At the very least, however, a college course in business law should address two high-level questions: (1) what is the relation between law and morality? (after all, my course is literally called “the legal and ethical environments of business”), and (2) what is the most important feature of the “legal environment” in which firms, employees, and entrepreneurs make decisions and interact with each other? With respect to this second question, I would argue that the “rule of law” is an important aspect of the legal environment of business, but this observation, in turn, poses two further questions: (3a) what is the “rule of law”? and (3b) why is it important, especially to business? To address these key questions, I am asking the students in my honors section to read “The Rule of Law” by Tom Bingham during the first third of the semester. (According to Wikipedia, Bingham was an eminent British judge and the greatest lawyer of his generation.) Starting late next week, I will begin writing up and posting a chapter-by-chapter review of Bingham’s classic book.

I confess that I am still in tears whenever I think of my colleague, mentor, and friend Dr Dean Cleavenger. Suffice it to say that Dean was one of only three colleagues in my 25-year teaching career who really wanted to get to know me and become my friend. His memorial service (see here) will begin at 11:15 AM on Saturday, 11 February, at the CrossLife Church on 45 W. Broadway Street in Oviedo, Florida.

My previous post highlighted some of the scholarly work of my colleague, mentor, and friend Dr Dean Cleavenger (1966 – 2022). Today, to give you some idea of Dean’s warm and inviting personality as well as his teaching style, I am sharing one of his videos on the topic of fear:
To honor the memory of my late colleague, mentor, and friend Dr Dean Cleavenger (pictured below), I want to share some of Dean’s scholarly work with my loyal followers. In addition to being a full-time lecturer (UCF), Fulbright scholar (Romania), and business owner (MidKnight Solar), Dean had developed a cutting-edge and interdisciplinary research agenda. Among other things, he made original and significant contributions to the study of neural networks (see here) and employee behavior (here and here). His most cited work, however, explored the “meaning of work” of the logic of “transformational leadership” (see here and here). But my personal favorite Dean Cleavenger paper by far is still his work on “The Buy-In: A Qualitative Investigation of the Textbook Purchase Decision“, which was co-authored with Brendan Richard and Valerie Storey and was published in the Journal of Higher Education Theory & Practice in 2014. This fascinating paper explores the timing and inner logic of college students’ decision-making process regarding textbooks. Specifically, why do some students delay or decide not to buy an assigned textbook? Among other things, Dean and his colleagues found that students make textbook purchase decisions “in a surprisingly well-thought-out and complex manner,” and they conclude their textbook-decision paper with the following frank and surprising observation: “Unbeknownst to the researchers prior to this study students are engaging in a long drawn out purchase decision-making process that encompasses all five stages of Dewey’s [critical thinking] model ….” Touche’!
Beyond his scholarly work, Dean was also my friend and mentor. I will share some personal reflections about Dean’s life in my next post.

I received some somber news today (10 January): “As we begin the spring semester, I am sad to write that we’ve learned our former colleague Dean Cleavenger passed away Dec. 10. Dean was on faculty with us for from 2007-21, teaching our core management course as well as in the graduate and MBA programs. He was a great colleague and good friend to many. He was well respected by his students and known for his engaging and humorous storytelling. He had his Ph.D. from Ole Miss and was a Fulbright Scholar and an entrepreneur. He is survived by his children, Samuel and Maggie Cleavenger.” This short notice doesn’t even begin to do justice to Dr Dean Cleavenger’s legacy as a teacher and scholar, and his death is especially poignant because I not only knew Dean personally since the fall of 2014 (we both taught “lecture capture” courses at our home institution and met for lunch almost every month); I am only two years younger than Dean. I will post an elegy to my fellow scholar and friend soon; in the meantime, I found this touching tribute written by Dean’s son Samuel.
Today (9 January) is the first day of my spring semester, so I am busy updating my syllabi and catching up on old emails; in the meantime, I am reblogging below this 2019 song by dj poolboi.
I discovered this haunting piece of instrumental music via the “Chill” station on SiriusXM (channel 53).

Singapore’s 1982 New Year was a little special, as it arrived earlier at 11:30pm on 31 December 1981. To meet the correct time, Singapore’s …
Singapore Trivia – Time Adjustment for Singapore in 1982
Via peterme.com: “Out of Sight was placed on YouTube in 2010, but I only just discovered it in the past month, when The Algorithm served it up and I clicked out of idle curiosity. A gentle Miyazaki-esque animation with a light surprise, it quickly became a personal favorite, which I then immediately shared with D. You won’t spend a better 5:27 on YouTube today.” Hat tip: kottke.
Happy Three Kings Day! To commemorate the Epiphany, I am reblogging my Three Kings Day post from 2021.
Today (6 January) is Epiphany, or “Three Kings’ Day”; pictured below is a poster commemorating Three Kings Day, a poster originally made in 1982 by Nuyorican artist Manny Vega. More details about the significance of this holy day to my Latin American brothers and sisters are available here.

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