Peter A. Bamberger  Editor |
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Peter A. Bamberger PhD Cornell University) is Professor of Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management at the Coller School of Management, Tel Aviv University, and Senior Research Scholar at the School of Industrial and Labor Relations, Cornell University, where he serves as Research Director for the School's Smithers Institute. Current research interests include peer relations and employee helping processes, occupational health psychology, and compensation strategy. Co-author of Human Resource Strategy (Sage, 2000; Routledge, 2014), Mutual Aid and Union Renewal (Cornell Univ. Press, 2001), and Retirement and the Hidden Epidemic: The Complex Link Between Aging, Work Disengagement, and Substance Misuse and What To Do About It (Oxford Univ. Press, 2014), Bamberger has published over 90 referred journal articles in such journals as Academy of Management Journal, Administrative Science Quarterly, Academy of Management Review, and Journal of Applied Psychology. An elected fellow of SIOP, he served as an associate editor of the Academy of Management Journal (2007-2010) and founding associate editor of Academy of Management Discoveries (2012-2017), and serves on the editorial board of several other leading journals. His interests outside academia include his family (wife Ellen and three kids - Zach, Sarah and Noa), hiking, and skiing. |
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Marlys Christianson Associate Editor |
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Marlys Christianson (PhD in Management & Organizations, University of Michigan) is an Associate Professor of Organizational Behaviour at Rotman. Her research interests include sensemaking, coordination of complex and interdependent work, resilient organizing, and error detection and correction. Her work has been published in a variety of outlets including Academy of Management Annals, Academy of Management Perspectives, Journal of Management Inquiry, Journal of Organizational Behavior, Organizational Research Methods, and Organization Science. She served as a Representative-at-Large for the Managerial and Organizational Cognition division of the Academy of Management. She has also served on the editorial boards of Academy of Management Discoveries, Administrative Science Quarterly, Journal of Management Inquiry, and Organization Science. |
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Paul Ingram Associate Editor |
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Paul Ingram is the Kravis Professor Business at the Columbia Business School, and Faculty Director of the Columbia Advanced Management Program, Columbia's flagship residential program for senior executives from around the globe. His PhD is from Cornell University, and he was on the faculty of Carnegie Mellon University before coming to Columbia. He has held visiting professorships at Tel Aviv University, Shanghai Jiao Tong University and the University of Toronto. The courses he teaches on management and strategy benefit from his research on organizations in the United States, Canada, Israel, Scotland, China, Korea and Australia. His research has been published in more than sixty articles, book chapters and books. Ingram's current research examines the intersection between culture and social networks. Recent papers investigate questions such as the role of value similarity to foster business networks, determinants and outcomes of individuals' fit in organizational cultures, and influences on ethical decision making. He has served as President of the College of Organization Science of the Institute for Operations Research and Management Science (INFORMS). He is currently an Associate Editor for Academy of Management Discoveries, and has served as a consulting editor for the American Journal of Sociology, a senior editor for Organization Science, an Associate Editor for Management Science and on the editorial boards of Administrative Science Quarterly and Strategic Organization. Paul's undergraduate degree is from Brock University where received the Governor General's Award as the top graduating student. In 2004 he received the Distinguished Graduate Award from Brock's Faculty of Business. At the Columbia Business School, Paul has received the Dean's Award for Teaching Excellence, won the Commitment to Excellence Award, voted by graduating EMBA students four times, and thrice been chosen by graduating EMBA students to deliver the keynote speech at their commencement ceremony. He has consulted on issues of organizational design and strategy to leading companies in the finance, health care, insurance, energy, and consumer products industries. Paul was born in Canada to immigrant parents. He is an alumnus of the proletariat, and the first in his family to attend college. |
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Jennifer S. Mueller  Associate Editor |
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Jennifer S. Mueller is an Associate Professor of Management at the University of San Diego. She has her PhD in Social and Developmental Psychology from Brandeis University and studies creativity, leadership and teams. Her work reveals the implicit beliefs (e.g., stereotypes, cultural narratives, and lay scripts) that harm effective collaboration, assessments of leadership potential, and the recognition of creative ideas. Jennifer has published many articles in top journals including: Academy of Management Journal, Academy of Management Discoveries, Management Science, Administrative Science Quarterly, Journal of Applied Psychology, Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, Journal of Experimental Social Psychology and Psychological Science. She is currently on the editorial boards of Organization Science, Journal of Applied Psychology as well as Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes. Jennifer's work has been featured in many major media outlets including WSJ, New York Magazine, NPR, CNN, HBR, the Atlantic, Fortune, Forbes, and Fast Company. She recently published a book Creative Change: Why We Resist It…How We Can Embrace It, which was selected as one of Forbes Top 17 Creative Leadership Book Picks for 2017. She previously served on the faculty of the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania. A native Californian, Jennifer enjoys living near family, daily walks on the beach, mountain-biking, and fussing over her dachshund Sammy. |
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Sandra Robinson  Associate Editor |
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Sandra Robinson (PhD Northwestern) is a Professor and Distinguished University Scholar in the Sauder School of Business at the University of British Columbia, where she has served as chair of the tenure and promotion committee and is the upcoming Director of the PhD Program.
Sandra is known for her research on the 'darkside' of organization behavior, and has had a keen interest in introducing and developing new focal areas of study under this umbrella. Her work has been some of the earliest in the areas of psychological contract breach and trust betrayal, workplace deviance, territorial behavior and workplace ostracism. She has published in a wide range of well regarded journals, such as Academy of Management Journal, Academy of Management Review, Administrative Science Quarterly and Journal of Applied Psychology, and her work has been covered in numerous popular press outlets, such as the Wall Street Journal, The Economist and CNN.
Sandra has earned numerous awards for her research record, such as the Ascendant Scholar of the Western Academy of Management, the JMI Distinguished Scholar, and the Cummings Award from the OB Division of the AoM. She has also earned awards for reviewing, such as from Academy of Management Journal and Academy of Management Discoveries, along with various awards for service. On service, Sandra has held a number of elected professional roles, including Rep-at-Large for the Western Academy, Rep-at-large for the OB Division,of AoM, in addition to serving five years on the Chair Track of the OB Division of AOM, starting with the role of Program Chair and ending with the role of Division Chair.
When not working, Sandra enjoys traveling, most outdoor activities (even in the Vancouver rain), and spending time with her family (husband Ron, daughter Lexi, and her three standard poodles named Wally, Stanley, and Fred).
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Junqi (Jason) Shi Associate Editor |
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Junqi (Jason) Shi is a professor of Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management in the Lingnan (University) College at Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou, China. He received his PhD in Industrial–organizational Psychology from Peking University. His current research interests include leadership, work stress, occupational health psychology, and emotional labor. Awards and Honors includes: Chang Jiang Scholars (Ministry of Education, People's Republic of China); The National Science Fund for Distinguished Young Scholars(National Science Fund of China); Program for New Century Excellent Talents in University (Ministry of Education, People's Republic of China). Dr. Shi has published over 50 referred journal articles in such journals as Academy of Management Journal, Journal of Applied Psychology, Annual Review of Psychology, and Personnel Psychology. He served as an associate editor of Work, Aging, and Retirement (2015-present), and serves on the editorial board of Journal of Applied Psychology. |
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Christopher L. Tucci Associate Editor |
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Christopher L. Tucci is Dean of the College of Management of Technology at the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), where he holds the Chair in Corporate Strategy & Innovation. He received the degrees of PhD in Management from the Sloan School of Management, MIT; SM (Technology & Policy) from MIT; and BS (Mathematical Sciences), AB (Music), and MS (Computer Science) from Stanford University. Before returning for his PhD, he was an industrial computer scientist involved in developing Internet protocols and applying artificial intelligence tools to solve industrial problems. Professor Tucci joined EPFL in 2003 where he teaches courses in Technology and Innovation Management (TIM), Information Technology Strategy, and Research Methods. His primary areas of interest are business models, open innovation, crowdsourcing, and dynamic capabilities. He is also studying how the popularization of the Internet affects firms in different industries. He has published articles in, among others, Academy of Management Review, Strategic Management Journal, Management Science, Research Policy, Communications of the ACM, Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal, Academy of Management Annals, and Journal of Product Innovation Management. His 2012 article with Allan Afuah, "Crowdsourcing as Solution to Distant Search," won the Best Paper of 2012 for AMR. He was the TIM Department Editor for the IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management and was on the Editorial Board of Organization Science. In 2004, he was elected to the five-year division leadership track of the Academy of Management's (AOM) TIM Division. In 2010, he was elected to the leadership track of the SMS' Strategy & Entrepreneurship Interest Group. In 2013, he was elected to the AOM's Board of Governors. |
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Gail Whiteman Associate Editor |
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Gail Whiteman is Director of the Pentland Centre for Sustainability in Business at Lancaster University, UK. Her research utilizes organisation theory on knowledge to analyse how a range of actors (companies, civil society, and local communities) make sense of ecological change, and how these actors transform and build resilience across scales given environmental pressures and social inequities. Her research has been published in the Academy of Management Discoveries, Academy of Management Journal, Academy of Management Review (forthcoming), Academy of Management Learning and Education, Climatic Change, Journal of Management Studies, Organization Studies, Journal of Cleaner Production, Ecology & Society, and Nature.
Gail is also the Professor-in-Residence at the World Business Council for Sustainable Development and was actively involved in building science-based targets including those for a future low-carbon economy. She was a Research Fellow of the Cambridge Centre for Climate Change Mitigation Research (4CMR), a Steering Committee member of the Future Earth Forum in 2014, and is a member of the Resilience Alliance, an international research organisation of scientists and practitioners who collaborate to explore the dynamics of social-ecological systems.
She is also the founder and co-organizer of the Arctic Basecamp side-event at the World Economic Forum's annual meeting at Davos–an idea that originated in the North-West Passage of the Canadian Arctic, and included keynotes speakers such as Al Gore and Christiana Figueres. She has written numerous blogs including a series for the World Economic Forum on the global risks of Arctic change.
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Susan Zaid AMD Managing Editor and AOM Editorial Services Director |
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AMD Advisory Board
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Paul Adler {U of Southern California} Stephen Barley {U of California - Santa Barbara} Jay B. Barney {U of Utah} Jean Bartunek {Boston College} Paul R. Carlile {Boston U} Adam Grant {U of Pennsylvania} Royston Greenwood {U of Alberta} Donald Hambrick {Pennsylvania State U} Rebecca Henderson {Harvard Business School} John Hollenbeck {Michigan State U} Martin Kilduff {University College London} Alan Meyer {U of Oregon} Henry Mintzberg {McGill U} Elizabeth Morrison {New York U} Andrew Pettigrew {Oxford U} Jeffrey Pfeffer {Stanford} Denise Rousseau {Carnegie Mellon} Sara Rynes {U of Iowa} Stephen Shortell {U of California - Berkeley} Anne Tsui {U of Notre Dame} Michael Tushman {Harvard Business School} Mary Waller {Texas Christian U} Mo Wang {U of Florida} |
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AMD Editorial Board
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Hajo Adam {Rice U} Sharon Alvarez {U of Pittsburgh} Soon Ang {Nanyang Technological U, Singapore} Africa Arino {IESE Business School} Blake E. Ashforth {Arizona State U} Beth Bechky {New York U} Julian Birkinshaw {London Business School} Brian Boyd {City U of Hong Kong} Daniel J. Brass {U of Kentucky} Matthais Brauer {U of Mannheim} Stefano Brusoni {ETH Zurich} John Bryson {U of Minnesota} Laura B. Cardinal {U of South Carolina} Andrew Carton {U Penn} Roy Chua {Singapore Management U} Jose Cortina {Virginia Commonwealth U} Donal Crilly {London Business School} Robert David {McGill U} Mark de Rond {Cambridge U} Angelo DeNisi {Tulane U} Gina Dokko {U of California - Davis} Gary Dushnitsky {London Business School} Jeffrey Edwards {U of North Carolina} Kimberly D. Elsbach {U of California - Davis} Martha Feldman {U of Southern California-Irvine} Fabrizio Ferraro {IESE Business School} Daniel Forbes {U of Minnesota} Yitzhak Fried {Syracuse U} Marylene Gagne {U of Western Australia} Martin Ganco {U of Wisconsin - Minnesota} Raghu Garud {Pennsylvania State U} Elizabeth George {U of Auckland} Javier Gimeno {INSEAD} Jack Goncalo {U of Illinois} Nina Gupta {U of Arkansass} Spencer Harrison {Boston College} Sarah Harvey {UCL School of Management} Donald E. Hatfield {Virginia Tech} John Hausknecht {Cornell U} Daniel Heller {Tel Aviv University} Pamela Hinds {Stanford U} Violet Ho {U of Richmond} Gerard Hodgkinson {U of Manchester} Karin Hoisl {Max Planck Institute} George Huber {U of Texas} Lynn Isabella {U of Virginia} Scott G Johnson {Oklahoma State U} John Kammeyer-Mueller {U of Minnesota} Ronit Kark {Bar-Ilan U} Howard J Klein {Ohio State U} Joel Koopman {Texas A&M U} Amy Kristof-Brown {U of Iowa} Tomi Laamanen {U of St. Gallen} Ann Langley {HEC Montreal} Dora C. Lau {City U of Hong Kong} Curtis LeBaron {Brigham Young U} Peter Ping Li {Copenhagen Business School} Filip Lievens {Ghent U} Dong M. Liu {Georgia Institute of Technology} Jeffrey Loewenstein {U Illinois} Sean Lux {U of South Florida} Tammy L. Madsen {Santa Clara U} Joseph Magee {New York U} Johanna Mair {Hertie School of Governance} Katy Mason {Lancaster U} Shimul Melwani {U of North Carolina} Chet Miller {U of Houston} Frances Milliken {New York U} Laurie Milton {U of Calgary} Ella Miron Spektor {Technion U} Mark Mortensen {INSEAD} Caterina Moschieri {IE Business School} Kok Yee Ng {Nanyang Technological U, Singapore} Jackson Nickerson {Washington U in St. Louis} Gerardo Okhuysen {U of Southern California - Irvine} Mandy O'Neill {George Mason U} Randall Peterson {London Business School} Laura Poppo {U of Kansas} Michael Pratt {Boston College} Jeffrey Reuer {Purdue U} Christoph Riedl {Northeastern U} Shoshana D. Riza {London School of Economics} Kevin W. Rockmann {George Mason U} Christopher C. Rosen {U of Arkansass} Elizabeth Rouse {Boston U} Tamar Sagiv {Tel Aviv University} Harry Sapienza {U of Minnesota} Kelly E. See {U of Colorado - Denver} Scott Seibert {U of Oregon} Margaret Shaffer {U of Oklahoma} Inbal Nahum Shani {U of Michigan} Myles Shaver {U of Minnesota} Lynn Shore {Colorado State U} Zeki Simsek {Clemson U} Paul Spector {U of Southern Florida} John Sterman {MIT} Ithai Stern {INSEAD} Michael Sturman {Cornell U} John J. Sumanth {Wake Forest U} Kathleen Sutcliffe {Harvard U} Carmit T. Tadmor {Tel Aviv University} Bennett J. Tepper {Ohio State U} Christine Quinn Trank {Vanderbilt U} Charlie Trevor {U of Wisconsin - Madison} Haridimos Tsoukas {U of Cyprus} Eero Vaara {Aalto U School of Business} Keyvan Vakili {London School of Economics} Andrew H. Van de Ven {U of Minnesota} Georg von Krogh {ETH Zurich} David Wagner {U of Oregon} Francis J. Yammarino {SUNY Binghamton} Shaker Zahra {U of Minnesota} Zhen Zhang {Arizona State U} Yunxia Zhu {U of Queensland} Tammar Zilber {Hebrew U of Jerusalem} Maurizio Zollo {Universita Bocconi} |
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