

Routledge published Academic-Practitioner Relationships: Developments, Complexities and Opportunities, co-edited by Jean Bartunek, the Robert A. and Evelyn J. Ferris Chair and professor of management and organization. In addition, Bartunek and co-authors published “Time in Strategic Change Research” in Academy of Management Annals.
Alexander Bleier, assistant professor of marketing, was a distinguished speaker in June at Temple University’s Global Center for Big Data in Mobile Analytics. Bleier spoke on “Creating Effective Customer Experiences in Online Retailing.”
Professor of Acounting Jeffrey Cohen published “Media Bias and the Persistence of the Expectation Gap: An Analysis of Press Articles on Corporate Fraud” in the September 2017 Journal of Business Ethics.
In June, Stephanie Greene, professor and chair of business law and society, published “The Substantive Waiver Doctrine in Employment Arbitration Law” in the Harvard Law Review.
Professor of Information Systems Gerald Kane co-authored an article, “Achieving Digital Maturity: Adapting Your Company to a Changing World,” published in the MIT Sloan Management Review in July. Kane also wrote Sloan blog posts related to that topic in April and August.
Professor of Management and Organization Richard Nielsen delivered the keynote address, “Viable and Nonviable Corruption Reform Methods,” at the University of Dresden’s conference The Ethical Dimensions of Corruption, as well as a talk, “Quaker Approaches to Business Ethics,” at Creighton University. Nielsen also published “Who Do We Identify With? Ontological and Epistemological Challenges of Spanning Different Domains of Academic-Practitioner Praxis,” a chapter in the new Routledge book Academic-Practitioner Relationships: Developments, Complexities and Opportunities, co-edited by Carroll School colleague Jean Bartunek.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has tapped Jonathan Reuter, associate professor of finance, to conduct an internal study of investor literacy.
Professor of Accounting Sugata Roychowdhury is co-author of “Clarity Begins at Home: Internal Information Asymmetry and External Communication Quality,” which has been accepted for publication by The Accounting Review.
Harvard Business Review published “The Next Battle in Antitrust Will Be About Whether One Company Knows Everything About You,” co-authored by Mohan Subramaniam, associate professor of management and organization.
Professor and Galligan Chair of Strategy Sandra Waddock wrote a chapter, “Connecting—Making Social Science Matter: The Collaborative and Boundary-Spanning Work of Intellectual Shamans,” in her Carroll School colleague Jean Bartunek’s book Academic-Practitioner Relationships: Developments, Complexities and Opportunities, published by Routledge.