- Management and Marketing - Research Publications
Management and Marketing - Research Publications
Permanent URI for this collection
783 results
Filters
Settings
Statistics
Citations
Search Results
Now showing
1 - 10 of 783
-
ItemNo Preview AvailableORGANIZING FOR SUSTAINABILITYGeorge, G ; Haas, M ; Joshi, H ; McGahan, A ; Tracey, P (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2022)
-
ItemNo Preview AvailableMistresses, mothers, and headscarves: media representations of women in corruption scandals in IndonesiaPertiwi, K ; Mulya, TW (ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD, 2022-03-03)
-
ItemNo Preview AvailableThe Fear of COVID-19 Scale: Its Structure and Measurement Invariance Across 48 CountriesSawicki, AJ ; Zemojtel-Piotrowska, M ; Balcerowska, JM ; Sawicka, MJ ; Piotrowski, J ; Sedikides, C ; Jonason, PK ; Maltby, J ; Adamovic, M ; Agada, AMD ; Ahmed, O ; Al-Shawaf, L ; Appiah, SCY ; Ardi, R ; Babakr, ZH ; Baltatescu, S ; Bonato, M ; Cowden, RG ; Chobthamkit, P ; De Pretto, L ; Gouveia, VV ; Haretche, C ; Ilisko, D ; Aruta, JJB ; Jia, F ; Jovanovic, V ; Jukic, T ; Kamble, S ; Khachatryan, N ; Klicperova-Baker, M ; Koralov, M ; Kovacs, M ; Kretchner, M ; Fernandez, AL ; Liik, K ; Malik, NI ; Malysheva, K ; Moon, C ; Muehlbacher, S ; Nartova-Bochaver, S ; Torres-Marin, J ; Ozsoy, E ; Park, J ; Piccinelli, E ; Ramos-Diaz, J ; Ridic, O ; Samekin, A ; Starc, A ; Kieu, TTT ; Tomsik, R ; Umeh, CS ; Wills-Herrera, E ; Wlodarczyk, A ; Vally, Z ; Zand, S (AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC, 2022-01-20)Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) has been a source of fear around the world. We asked whether the measurement of this fear is trustworthy and comparable across countries. In particular, we explored the measurement invariance and cross-cultural replicability of the widely used Fear of COVID-19 scale (FCV-19S), testing community samples from 48 countries (N = 14,558). The findings indicate that the FCV-19S has a somewhat problematic structure, yet the one-factor solution is replicable across cultural contexts and could be used in studies that compare people who vary on gender and educational level. The validity of the scale is supported by a consistent pattern of positive correlations with perceived stress and general anxiety. However, given the unclear structure of the FCV-19S, we recommend using latent factor scores, instead of raw scores, especially in cross-cultural comparisons. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
-
ItemNo Preview AvailableUsing a 'lens' to re-search business markets, relationships and networks: Tensions, challenges and possibilitiesOjansivu, I ; Medlin, CJ ; Andersen, PH ; Kim, W (ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC, 2021-11-17)
-
ItemNo Preview AvailableExamining trade-offs in the airline industryBhattacharya, A ; Singh, PJ ; Nand, A (Inderscience Publishers, 2021)
-
ItemNo Preview AvailableSocietal challenges and business leadership for social innovationPless, NM ; Murphy, M ; Maak, T ; Sengupta, A (EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD, 2021-08-13)Purpose Today’s pressing global societal challenges are urgent and require substantial solutions and innovations that tackle the roots of a problem. These challenges call for new forms of leadership, stakeholder engagement and innovation. This paper aims to examine whether, why and how business leaders engage in social innovation. The authors argue that leadership perspective and motivation are important drivers for developing substantial social innovations suited to resolving societal challenges at their roots. More specifically, the authors propose that intra-personal factors (degree of care and compassion), an inter-relational perspective of leadership (shareholder versus stakeholder) and the corresponding leadership motivation (personalized versus socialized) may unveil what quality of social innovation (first-order versus second-order solutions) is pursued by a business leader. Implications for future research and practice are provided. Design/methodology/approach The authors revisit the concept of social innovation and explore its connection with care and compassion. They suggest a series of propositions pertaining to the relationship between different configurations of leadership and different forms of social innovation. Findings Responsible business leaders with an integrative leader trait configuration (stakeholder perspective, socialized motivation, high degree of care and compassion) are more likely to foster substantial second-order social innovations for uprooting societal problems than business leader with an instrumental leader trait configuration (shareholder perspective, personalized motivation, low degree of care and compassion). An organization’s stakeholder culture plays a moderating role in the relation between leadership and social innovation. Social implications This paper reveals a path for conceptualizing leadership in social innovation from a stakeholder perspective. Future research should investigate the role of business leaders, their mindsets, styles and relational competencies in co-creation processes of social innovation empirically. If the development of substantial second-order social innovations requires leaders with a stakeholder perspective and socialized approach, then this has implications for leader selection and development. Originality/value This paper advocates for new kinds of leaders in facilitating and sustaining social innovations to tackle global societal challenges.
-
ItemNo Preview AvailableCOVID-19 is an opportunity to rethink I-O psychology, not for business as usualBapuji, H ; Patel, C ; Ertug, G ; Allen, DG (CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS, 2021-06-01)
-
ItemNo Preview Available"How Do I Carry All This Now?" Understanding Consumer Resistance to Sustainability InterventionsGonzalez-Arcos, C ; Joubert, AM ; Scaraboto, D ; Guesalaga, R ; Sandberg, J (SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC, 2021-05-01)Given the increasingly grave environmental crisis, governments and organizations frequently initiate sustainability interventions to encourage sustainable behavior in individual consumers. However, prevalent behavioral approaches to sustainability interventions often have the unintended consequence of generating consumer resistance, undermining their effectiveness. With a practice–theoretical perspective, the authors investigate what generates consumer resistance and how it can be reduced, using consumer responses to a nationwide ban on plastic bags in Chile in 2019. The findings show that consumer resistance to sustainability interventions emerges not primarily because consumers are unwilling to change their individual behavior—as the existing literature commonly assumes—but because the individual behaviors being targeted are embedded in dynamic social practices. When sustainability interventions aim to change individual behaviors rather than social practices, they place excessive responsibility on consumers, unsettle their practice-related emotionality, and destabilize the multiple practices that interconnect to shape consumers’ lives, ultimately leading to resistance. The authors propose a theory of consumer resistance in social practice change that explains consumer resistance to sustainability interventions and ways of reducing it. They also offer recommendations for policy makers and social marketers in designing and managing sustainability initiatives that trigger less consumer resistance and thereby foster sustainable consumer behavior.
-
ItemNo Preview AvailableThe Future of Digital Communication Research: Considering Dynamics and MultimodalityGrewal, D ; Herhausen, D ; Ludwig, S ; Villarroel Ordenes, F (Elsevier BV, 2022-06-01)
-
ItemNo Preview AvailableThe Lived Experience of Paradox: How Individuals Navigate Tensions during the Pandemic CrisisPradies, C ; Aust, I ; Bednarek, R ; Brandl, J ; Carmine, S ; Cheal, J ; Pina e Cunha, M ; Gaim, M ; Keegan, A ; Le, JK ; Miron-Spektor, E ; Nielsen, RK ; Pouthier, V ; Sharma, G ; Sparr, JL ; Vince, R ; Keller, J (SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC, 2021-01-27)