Please join us at the InterContinental Hotel for lunch on April 14th as we hear from Steve Young and Tara Marshall. 

Stephen B. Young is the Global Executive Director of the Caux Round Table for Moral Capitalism, an international network of experienced business leaders who advocate a principled approach to global capitalism.  He was educated at the International School Bangkok, Harvard College, and Harvard Law School.  Please click on the post to learn more about Steve!

Tara Marshall is a licensed psychotherapist, consultant, and business owner with nearly three decades of experience in mental health. She has served in multiple leadership and acting roles across the human services sector and as an adjunct faculty member at Adler Graduate School.  Please click on the post to learn more about Tara!

 
Join Zoom Meeting  
Meeting officially begins at 12:15 PM

https://zoom.us/j/8251848268?pwd=a0thQ0NqWi93aXpyeFBGT1JRNHlTUT09

Meeting ID: 825 184 8268

Passcode: 643825

Or, join by Phone:  (312) 626-6799 or (346) 248-7799
Please join us at the InterContinental Hotel for lunch on April 14th as we hear from Steve Young and Tara Marshall. 

Stephen B. Young is the Global Executive Director of the Caux Round Table for Moral Capitalism, an international network of experienced business leaders who advocate a principled approach to global capitalism.  He was educated at the International School Bangkok, Harvard College, and Harvard Law School.  

In 1966 Young discovered the Bronze Age culture of Ban Chiang in Northeast Thailand, now a UNESCO World Heritage site.

On July 4, 1776, Young’s maternal forebearer Lewis Morris signed the Declaration of Independence. A few years later, Gouverneur Morris, half-brother to Lewis, signed the proposed Constitution and wrote its Preamble.

Young served with the US Agency for International Development in South Vietnam from 1968 to 1972 in the village development and counterinsurgency program. He later was a lawyer with Simpson, Thatcher and Bartlett in New York City and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, and an Assistant Dean of Harvard Law School. Young came to Minnesota to become the Dean of the Hamline University School of Law.

Young has taught corporate social responsibility at the Sasin School of Management, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand, and at the Carlson School of Business at the University of Minnesota.

In 2008 Prof. Sandra Waddock of the Carroll School of Management of Boston College listed Young among the 23 persons who created the corporate social responsibility movement in her book The Difference Makers.

Young has received the Albert Nelson Marquis Lifetime Achievement Award, the highest honor extended by Marquis Who’s Who and has been included in Who's Who Commemorative Edition Book 2023-2024 for Lifetime Achievement.

Soon to be published is Young’s book – America vs. the Overclass – How a New Elite Corrupted Our Nation and What we can do to stop them.

Young wrote Kissinger’s Betrayal: How America Lost the Vietnam War, a history of Henry Kissinger’s 1971 personal decision to abandon South Vietnam to fate after the entering into force of a peace agreement affirming the right of South Vietnamese to independence and political autonomy. As of March 7, 773,000 Vietnamese have learned the truth about how the Vietnam war really was “won” by watching Young’s interview on BBC News/Vietnamese, triggering a collapse in popular respect for the Vietnamese Communist Party. The Party’s response to Young’s book has been silence, thus affirming the truth of his narrative.

In 2023, Young published Moral Capitalism, a well-received book written as a guide to use of the Caux Round Table ethical and socially responsible Principles for Business.

Young is the only non-Catholic member of the Advisory Council to the Papal Fondazione Centesimus Annus Pro Pontifice, established by Pope (now Saint) John Paul II as a lay organization to promote Catholic Social Teachings.

Young has written The Theory and Practice of Associative Power – CORDS in the village of Vietnam 1967-1972.With Nguyen Ngoc Huy he wrote The Tradition of Human Rights in China and Vietnam, and with Prof. Abdullah Al-Ahsan has edited a book on Qur’anic Guidance for Good Governance. Young and his wife translated the novel The Zenith from Vietnamese into English, a behind-the scenes look at the real Ho Chi Minh.

His commentaries have been published in The Washington Post, The New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Asia Times, Real Clear Politics; Real Clear Defense, the American Thinker, American Greatness, the Star Tribune. He has an author’s site on Substack.

 

Tara Marshall is a licensed psychotherapist, consultant, and business owner with nearly three decades of experience in mental health. She has served in multiple leadership and acting roles across the human services sector and as an adjunct faculty member at Adler Graduate School.

For the past six years, Tara has owned and led a private practice that integrates therapy, coaching, and consulting into a cohesive developmental model designed to meet a wide range of community needs.

She facilitates high-level strategic conversations on leadership, trust, personality dynamics, organizational culture, and inner direction—strengthening relational effectiveness, clarity, and aligned execution.

Tara’s career and lived experience converge at the intersection of mental well-being, transformative leadership, and mission-aligned systems. She partners with leaders and institutions to translate vision into culture and operational practice, creating sustained impact and long-term stability.

Through decades of clinical practice and entrepreneurship, Tara has come to understand that sustainable success does not begin with strategy alone, but with inner direction. Alignment with core values, principled action, and trustworthiness form the foundation of meaningful leadership and lasting stability. When individuals and organizations operate from this center, resilience and growth become embedded practice rather than performative outcomes.

 
 
Join Zoom Meeting  
Meeting officially begins at 12:15 PM

https://zoom.us/j/8251848268?pwd=a0thQ0NqWi93aXpyeFBGT1JRNHlTUT09

Meeting ID: 825 184 8268

Passcode: 643825

Or, join by Phone:  (312) 626-6799 or (346) 248-7799