Tag Archives: Regeneration

New Release-The Real Cost of Regeneration: Judgement and the Limits of Modern Organizations

Title:  The Real Cost of Regeneration

 

Subtitle:  Judgement and the Limits of Modern Organizations

Author:  by Joel Carboni 

Genre:     Non-Fiction/Business/Personal Improvement

Format: eBook and Soft Cover and hardcover

Length:   132 pages

Publication Date: February, 2026

Synopsis:

The Real Cost of Regeneration: Judgment and the Limits of Modern Organizations examines why sustainable business strategy, regenerative leadership, and organizational design so often fail—even when intentions are good and effort is high.

This is not a leadership self‑help book. It is a systems thinking analysis of corporate governance, decision‑making under pressure, and organizational judgment in modern businesses and institutions—for readers who want to understand why sustainability and ESG efforts fail beyond surface‑level explanations.

Most organizations do not fail because leaders lack courage or values. They fail because systems decide before people do. Through alignment, speed, professionalism, portfolio management, risk and assurance processes, and late‑stage governance, leadership accountability is quietly displaced and judgment is narrowed long before harm becomes visible.

Written for board members, executives, senior leaders, sustainability professionals, and system designers working on ESG beyond compliance, this book examines:

  • Why speed becomes a design constraint that eliminates pause and refusal
  • How alignment and “professionalism” replace judgment in leadership teams
  • Why risk management and assurance often function as permission, not protection
  • How portfolio management converts strategic intent into obligation
  • Why formal authority arrives after decisions are already irreversible
  • How teams absorb harm that systems refuse to hold
  • Why regeneration requires giving up speed, optionality, deniability, and certain forms of power and growth

Rather than offering leadership frameworks or inspirational advice, The Real Cost of Regeneration exposes the structural limits of modern organizational design and asks what would actually have to change for regenerative leadership, sustainable business, and ethical governance to be real rather than performative.

If you are looking for a guide on how to motivate people or optimize performance, this book is not for you.

If you want to understand how systems create harm in well‑run organizations—and what regeneration actually costs when taken seriously—this book is the conversation most leadership literature avoids.

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Filed under Non-fiction, Self Help