CEST 7 p.m. – 8:30 p.m.
EST (Montreal) 1:00 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
In keeping with the 2021 ASAC theme of “Considering Impacts on Business and Society” this 90-minute panel discussion will feature five panelists with a variety of editorial experience discussing their future visions of the changes they see coming to publishing and research more broadly going forward to improve the impact of management research, as well as the role they see for journal editors to play in creating that future.
Moderator Bio
William Foster (University of Alberta) is the Former Editor of Academy of Management Learning and Education and former ASAC OT Division Chair.
Panelist Bios
Lillian Eby (University of Georgia) is the Editor in Chief of the Journal of Applied Psychology, former Associate Editor of Personnel Psychology and Journal of Applied Psychology, and Director of Owens Behavioral Institute for Research at the University of Georgia.
Jerry Davis (University of Michigan) is Co-Founder of the Responsible Research in Business and Management (RRBM) Network, Co-Founder of Community of Social Innovation, Academy of Management Fellow, Society for Progress Fellow, HIBAR Research Alliance Member, former Editor in Chief of Administrative Science Quarterly, and former Associate Dean for Business + Impact at Michigan Ross School of Business
Terri Griffith (Simon Fraser University) is Associate Editor of Group Decision and Negotiation, former Senior Editor of Organization Science, and former Associate Editor of MIS Quarterly
Michel Laroche (Concordia) is Editor of Canadian Journal of Administrative Science, former Managing Editor of Journal of Business Research, Royal Society of Canada Fellow, American Psychological Association Fellow, Society for Marketing Advances Fellow, and Academy of Marketing Science Fellow
Marc-David Seidel (University of British Columbia) is Associate Editor of Administrative Science Quarterly, HIBAR Research Alliance Fellow, former ASAC OT Division Chair, and Director of W. Maurice Young Centre for Entrepreneurship & Venture Capital Research at the University of British Columbia.