This book provides an expansive review of the public goods/commons theme and highlights the inherent linkage between public goods provision and human wellbeing. Scholars, policy makers and business leaders will benefit from the author's stance on how collaborative efforts of the state and the private sector promote the current and future welfare of societies. In my opinion, the book will lead to rewarding discussions between decision makers, and it will induce performance improvements. - Jürgen Strube, Honorary Chairman and ex-CEO of BASF SE
The book serves the purpose of framing and shaping the academic and political discourse on the provision and the use of public goods/commons. It provides a clear and accessible understanding of how to strike the best approach towards balancing economic and societal vitality today with preserving mankind's resources for future generations. This conversation matters the more when viewing the consequences of the COVID pandemic, the Russian warmongery and the ruptures that threaten our world order. - Roland Koch, Frankfurt School of Finance and Management, former Governor of Hesse
The provision of public goods is vital for the sustainability of individuals and societies. The role of "the commons" in political economy is much misunderstood. This book provides an excellent basis for discussions, policies, and the furtherance of research on ways forward in debate and action on the mechanisms of delivery of public goods to enhance well-being. - Peter J Buckley, OBE, FBA, Alliance Manchester Business School, University of Manchester
This is a must-read for anyone involved in policymaking - whether on the local, the state, the national or the global level. Actions of politicians, as the author points out, influence public goods and wellbeing anywhere, and since all public goods are intertwined, all areas of human development are impacted worldwide. Positive impacts are driven by ethics. This is shown by the book and lived every day at the Wittenberg Center for Global Ethics, which I co-founded and where I met the author. The meaning of "global" is that decisions, wherever they are made, may cause worldwide repercussions. - Andrew Young, former Ambassador of the US to the United Nations, ex-mayor of Atlanta
Dr. Roland Bardy is owner of BardyConsult in Mannheim, Germany, where he mainly engages in management education. Prior to this, he worked at BASF SE, the German multinational, for about thirty years until 1999. Then he took up teaching at Goizueta Business School (Emory University) in Atlanta. He had various other assignments in the U.S., Germany, Austria, and Switzerland, with the last one being Executive Professor at Florida Gulf Coast University, Fort Myers.