Cutting NSF Is Like Liquidating Your Finest Investment
Look closely at your mobile phone or tablet. Touch-screen technology, speech recognition, digital sound recording and the internet were all developed using […]
SAGE is pleased to announce strong performance across its journals portfolio in the recently released 2011 Journal Citation Reports® (Thomson Reuters, 2012), […]
Today, Sunday Aug. 5, Academy of Management President Anne S. Tsui speaks at the 2012 AoM Annual Meeting Presidential Address and Awards […]
The Academy of Management 2012 Annual Meeting is here! SAGE’s booth at AoM brings you the latest scholarly research from Administrative Science […]
Free press vs. free speech? The rhetoric of “civility” in regard to anonymous online comments From Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly A psychological […]
Olympic Games. Of course this week’s key story is the London 2012 Olympics. HM Government Olympic Communication newsroom. Acts as a central […]
Editor’s Note: We’re pleased to welcome guest contributor Elizabeth Kelley, Associate Professor of Management at the School of Business Administration, Dalhousie University. […]
In the past twenty years there has been a revolution in economics with the study not of how people would behave if they were perfectly rational, but of how they actually behave. At the vanguard of this movement is Robert Shiller of Yale University. He sits down with Nigel Warburton in this episode of the Social Science Bites podcast
A bad credit check can mean losing a job or a promotion—and, as reported in Forbes this month, a whopping 47% of […]