Episodes
Published 09/30/24
What do you call the people you work with? Christian Kiewitz, professor of management at the University of Dayton, says there’s more to a name than you might think.
Published 08/23/24
In this episode of the Journal of Management Education podcast series, Amy Kenworthy is joined by Scott Allen and Steve Edelson, guest editors of the JME special issue "Brave New Classroom: Navigating Educational Technology in Management Education."
Published 06/14/24
In this episode of the Journal of Management Education podcast series, Amy Kenworthy talks with Suzanne de Janasz and Maury Peiperl guest editors of the April 2024 special issue, Teaching About Contemporary Careers.
Published 04/25/24
In this episode of the Journal of Management Education podcast series, Amy Kenworthy talks with Joy Beatty, Jennifer Lee and Kathy Lund Dean about their 2009 articles, "Philosophy Rediscovered: Exploring the Connections Between Teaching Philosophies, Educational Philosophies, and Philosophy" and "Finding Our Roots: An Exercise For Creating a Personal Teaching Philosophy Statement", which won the 2020 JME Lasting Impact Award.
Published 11/07/23
In this episode of the Journal of Management Education podcast series, Associate Editor Nicholas Rhew sits down to talk with George Hrivnak and Amy Kenworthy about the JME special section titled "Insights, Provocations, and Next Steps: Discoveries From the Research in Management Learning & Education (RMLE) UnConferences".
Published 11/07/23
Episode 3: Behind the scenes of Tree Flexing This interview with Steffen Boehm follows his publication of the tropical provocation, 'Tree flexing: Forest politics and land struggles in the green economy' to talk about questions of land-based Indigenous struggles, bioenergy, how academics use the term 'elite' and the role this provocation can play in educating for a more critical approach to business and climate change. Show Notes Böhm, S. (2023). Tree flexing: Forest politics and land...
Published 10/17/23
Project Management Journal® has awarded its “2023 Most Cited Paper of the Last 10 Years” award to Bent Flyvbjerg for his article, “What You Should Know About Megaprojects and Why: An Overview,” published in Project Management Journal, Vol. 45, No. 2. To learn more about the impact of this academic contribution to the profession, watch this video with Giorgio Locatelli and Bent Flyvbjerg. This is not owned, sponsored, or endorsed by the Project Management Institute or Sage. The views and...
Published 10/10/23
In this podcast for the Journal of Tropical Futures: Sustainable Business, Governance & Development we dig into Hugo's research paper to explore boundaries of vulnerability in large, complex multinationals. What can an ethnographic understanding of 'global' organisations offer to managing in the tropics? How do questions of sustainability figure (or not) to this conversation, especially for oil and gas companies? An array of important questions for future research and methodological...
Published 08/10/23
Episode 1: JTF interviews Tony Walker: The tropics should not become the world's plastic pollution problem In this episode, JTF Podcast Editor Joanna Stanberry interviews Tony Walker about his Tropical Provocation article, ‘The tropics should not become the world's plastic pollution problem’ in the Journal of Tropical Futures: Sustainable Business, Governance, & Development.  Content mentioned in the podcast: Tony Walker’s Journal of Tropical Futures article, The tropics should not...
Published 05/31/23
In this episode of the JME podcast series, Amy Kenworthy is joined by Dean Sophia Opatska, the Founding Dean of the Business School and Vice-Rector for Strategic Development of Ukrainian Catholic University in Lviv. More than one year after the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Dean Opatska reflects upon navigating the initial trauma of war by expeditiously redesigning her international business course to incorporate a service-learning project for the first time, and shares about her aim of...
Published 05/26/23
Agnessa Spanellis explains the core features of her paper 'Gamifying situated learning in organisations' that was also written with colleagues Igor Pyrko and Viktor Dörfler
Published 11/14/22
Anna Brown discusses her paper 'The mark of the researcher’s hand: the imperfections of craft in the process of becoming a qualitative researcher' whilst also reflecting on the publishing process with the journal. Anna received the 2021 'Best Paper' Award from the journal for this article.
Published 10/14/22
Our vision and plans for JIR for the next 5 years
Published 02/17/22
Ed Granter discusses his paper 'Upon the gears and upon the wheels’: Terror convergence and total administration in the neoliberal university' and reflects on the experience of publishing this work with Management Learning.
Published 01/27/22
José-Carlos discusses his paper 'Struggles over corporate social responsibility meanings in teaching practices: The case of hybrid problem-based learning' and the broader implications of this work for learning about social responsibility and encouraging critical reflexivity
Published 09/17/21
Published 04/28/21
Jeanie Forray and Kathy Lund Dean revisit the importance of impact first discussed in their August 2014 editorial (Some Thoughts on JME’s Direction…), providing authors with new tips and resources for gaining exposure to their articles.
Published 03/03/21
In this episode of the JME podcast series, Amy Kenworthy interviews Michael B. Elmes about his perspective on experiential learning and shadow dynamics, which he looks at in his JME article, "Working With(in) the Shadow of Experiential Learning."
Published 08/12/20
Jeanie Forray and Kathy Lund Dean discuss an element of the publishing sequence not always well understood by authors, and the ways in which this important document supports a high quality developmental review process that benefits both authors and reviewers.
Published 07/02/20
Professor Bernard Burnes discusses his upcoming paper "The Origins of Lewin's Three Step Model of Change."
Published 01/21/20
Jeanie Forray and Kathy Lund Dean discuss considerations relevant to authors when deciding whether to submit a manuscript to a special issue or hold it for a regular submission.
Published 01/09/20