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Panel Symposium: Economic Inequality and Management: Empirical and Theoretical Developments a Decade after Occupy (session 1223)

  • 1.  Panel Symposium: Economic Inequality and Management: Empirical and Theoretical Developments a Decade after Occupy (session 1223)

    Posted 08-07-2022 10:19

    Dear colleagues,

     

    If you are interested in economic inequality research, please join us at Pike Room, Westin Hotel Seattle at 10:30am (PDT) on Monday August 8 for the panel symposium about Economic Inequality and Management. Please find more detailed information about the symposium below.

     

    Title: Economic Inequality and Management: Empirical and Theoretical Developments a Decade after Occupy (session 1223)

     

    Introduction: A coherent agenda on economic inequality is still in its early stages of development in the management field. While research since the Occupy Wall Street movement of 2011 has helped legitimize the topic and brought inequality in vogue as a keyword in our journals, a central concern remains about how much empirical and theoretical progress has actually been made. Management scholarship in this area thus has to take stock of progress across the first decade since Occupy and critically assess empirical and theoretical insights to invigorate a new generation of scholars who can take us beyond this decade of inequality research and into the next. This panel symposium will bring together insights from the diverse panel and the discussant towards two objectives: first, to provide a critical assessment of the extent and nature of progress that has been made in the field, and second, to lay out a pathway of where the field needs to go in order to make important headway in terms of theoretical and empirical contributions, and also in providing contributions of relevance to policy and practice. In doing this, we provide an avenue for management scholars to engage with the theme of the Academy of Management 2022 conference, "Creating a Better World Together," given that inequality remains one of the most pressing societal grand challenges of our times.

     

    Panelists: John Amis (University of Edinburgh), Matthew Bidwell (The Wharton School), J. Adam Cobb (University of Texas), Carrie Leana (University of Pittsburgh)

    Discussant: Anne Tsui (Arizona State University)

    Co-organizers: Suhaib Riaz (University of Ottawa), Kaifeng Jiang (The Ohio State University)

     

    Thank you and best wishes,

    Kaifeng

     

    Kaifeng Jiang. Ph.D.

    Professor of Management and Human Resources

    Fisher College of Business

    The Ohio State University

    750 Fisher Hall, 2100 Neil Avenue, Columbus, OH 43210

    jiang.1788@osu.edu fisher.osu.edu kaifengjiangshrm.com