ALISSA BILFIELD’s paper “Exploring the Implications of the Fair Trade USA Certification for Farmworker Health and Well-being at the First Certified Farm in the U.S.,” co-authored with Edmundo Hernandez, was published in the Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development in fall 2023. Bilfield is a professor of practice in management.
MUSA CAGLAR’s paper “A Parsimonious Tree Augmented Naive Bayes Model for Exploring Colorectal Cancer Survival Factors and Their Conditional Interrelations,” co-authored with Ali Dag, Abdullah Asilkalkan, Osman Aydas, Serhat Simsek and Dursun Delen, was accepted for publication in Information Systems Frontiers. Caglar is a professor of practice in management science.
ADRIENNE COLELLA and NATALIE LONGMIRE’s paper “Relational Incongruence in Neurodiverse Workgroups: Practices for Cultivating Autistic Employee Authenticity and Belonging,” co-authored with Timothy Vogus, was accepted for publication in Human Resource Management. Colella is the James W. McFarland Distinguished Chair of Business and a professor of management, and Longmire is an assistant professor of management.
OLEG GREDIL’s paper “Do Employees Cheer for Private Equity? The Heterogeneous Effects of Buyouts on Job Quality,” coauthored with Will Gornall, Sabrina Howell, Xing Liu and Jason Sockin, was accepted for publication in Management Science. Gredil is the John B. Elstrott Professor in Entrepreneurship and an associate professor of finance.
YUMEI HE’s paper “Enhancing User Privacy Through Ephemeral Sharing Design: Experimental Evidence from Online Dating,” co-authored with Xingchen Xu, Ni Huang, Yili Hong and De Liu, was accepted for publication in Information Systems Research (ISR). He is an assistant professor of management science.
AMANDA HEITZ’s paper “The Power of the People: Labor Unions and Corporate Social Responsibility,” co-authored with Youan Wang and Zigan Wang, was accepted for publication in Review of Finance. Heitz is an assistant professor of finance.
CHRIS HYDOCK’s paper “Not Just about Price: How Benefit Focus Determines Consumers’ Retailer Pricing Strategy Preference,” co-authored with Luc Wathieu, was accepted for publication in the Journal of Consumer Research. Hydock is an assistant professor of marketing.
HONGSEOK JANG’s paper “Tailoring Technology for Heterogeneous Shoppers: Implications for e-Retail Channel Competition,” co-authored with Kyung Sung Jung and Young Kwark, was accepted for publication in Journal of Management Information Systems. Jang is an assistant professor of management science.
DEEN KEMSLEY’s paper “Tax Evasion Savings Versus Unlawful Predicate Proceeds: A Substance-Based Approach,” co-authored with Sean A. Kemsley, was accepted for publication in the Journal of Money Laundering Control. Kemsley is an associate professor of accounting.
BEN KING’s paper “Reconciling Theories on Why Employees of Small Firms Are More Likely to Become Entrepreneurs,” co-authored with Evan Starr and Martin Ganco, was accepted for publication in Industrial and Corporate Change. King is an assistant professor of management.
ROB LALKA, Albert R. Lepage Professor in Business and executive director of the Albert Lepage Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation, is the author of The Venture Alchemists: How Big Tech Turned Profits into Power (Columbia University Press), a new book that details the evolution of today’s tech entrepreneurs. Lalka discusses the adversities they overcame, the troubling tradeoffs they made and the tremendous power they now wield. Using leaked documents and previously unpublished archival material, Lalka explores Big Tech’s worst exploitations and abuses, alongside many good intentions and moral compromises.
CHRIS LIPP, professor of practice in business and legal studies and director of the Management the author of The Science of Personal Power: How to Build Confidence, Create Success and Obtain Freedom (Wiley). The book, which was released in November 2024, combines research, data and storytelling to reveal foundational concepts related to psychology, communication and leadership.
FARIBA MAMAGHANI’s paper “Harvesting Solar Power Foments Prices in a Vicious Cycle: Breaking the Cycle with Price Mechanisms,” co-authored with Metin Çakanyıldırım, was accepted for publication in Operations Research Journal. Mamaghani is an assistant professor of management science.
DANIEL MOCHON’s paper “Reference-dependent Risk-taking in the NBA” was accepted for publication in Journal of Behavioral Decision Making. Mochon is the Edward H. Austin Jr. Professor in Business Administration and an associate professor of marketing.
YANG PAN’s paper “Mobile Apps, Trading Behaviors, and Portfolio Performance: Evidence from a Quasi-Experiment in China,” co-authored with Chewei Liu, Sunil Mithas and J.J. Po-An Hsieh, was accepted for publication in Information Systems Research. Pan is an assistant professor of management science.
RUSS ROBIN‘s paper “A New Look at Expected Stock Returns and Volatility,” co-authored with Geoffrey Peter Smith, was accepted for publication in Critical Finance Review. Robins is the Jessica L. Streiffer and Edward L. Streiffer Chair in International Finance and a professor of finance.