Scott Kelley | DePaul University (original) (raw)
Scott Kelley is Associate Vice-President for Mission Integration in the Division of Mission and Ministry at DePaul University. He oversees the Vincentian Studies Institute, marketing, communications, and assessment for the Division. He also teaches course in Film Philosophy and Ethics in Gaming and Cinema in the College of Computing and Digital Media, and Developing Sustainable Strategy in the Driehaus College of Business. His areas of research and publication focus on Vincentian heritage, management education, Catholic higher education, and Catholic social thought. He received a PhD in Theological Ethics from Loyola University Chicago. linkedin.com/in/spkelley
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Books by Scott Kelley
In this book, the authors approach poverty alleviation from an atypical perspective. The thesis i... more In this book, the authors approach poverty alleviation from an atypical perspective. The thesis is that poverty can be reduced, if not eradicated, both locally and globally, but this will occur only if we change our shared narratives about global free enterprise, and only if we recalibrate our mindsets regarding how poverty issues are most effectively addressed. They argue that poverty amelioration cannot be effected by the traditional means employed during the last century—foreign aid from developed nations and/or from non-profit international organizations. Rather, the authors present evidence which demonstrates that a mindset embracing initiatives developed by global corporations in response to the poverty challenge is significantly more effective. Global companies can alleviate poverty by seizing market opportunities at the Base of the economic Pyramid (BoP) with the implementation of three key processes: moral imagination, systems thinking, and deep dialogue.
Papers by Scott Kelley
UMI, Jan 1, 2006
Abstract The underlying, operative question of my entire project concerns the formal relationship... more Abstract The underlying, operative question of my entire project concerns the formal relationship of 'spirituality'to ethics. I contend that spiritual experience is normative for ethics: one's elected worldview orders feeling-values according to an appropriated scale of ...
… Issue on Vincentian Higher Education and Poverty …, Jan 1, 2008
Vincentian Heritage …, Jan 1, 2008
Journal of Religion and Business Ethics, Jan 1, 2010
In this book, the authors approach poverty alleviation from an atypical perspective. The thesis i... more In this book, the authors approach poverty alleviation from an atypical perspective. The thesis is that poverty can be reduced, if not eradicated, both locally and globally, but this will occur only if we change our shared narratives about global free enterprise, and only if we recalibrate our mindsets regarding how poverty issues are most effectively addressed. They argue that poverty amelioration cannot be effected by the traditional means employed during the last century—foreign aid from developed nations and/or from non-profit international organizations. Rather, the authors present evidence which demonstrates that a mindset embracing initiatives developed by global corporations in response to the poverty challenge is significantly more effective. Global companies can alleviate poverty by seizing market opportunities at the Base of the economic Pyramid (BoP) with the implementation of three key processes: moral imagination, systems thinking, and deep dialogue.
UMI, Jan 1, 2006
Abstract The underlying, operative question of my entire project concerns the formal relationship... more Abstract The underlying, operative question of my entire project concerns the formal relationship of 'spirituality'to ethics. I contend that spiritual experience is normative for ethics: one's elected worldview orders feeling-values according to an appropriated scale of ...
… Issue on Vincentian Higher Education and Poverty …, Jan 1, 2008
Vincentian Heritage …, Jan 1, 2008
Journal of Religion and Business Ethics, Jan 1, 2010