Could Distributed Peer Review Better Decide Grant Funding?
The landscape of academic grant funding is notoriously competitive and plagued by lengthy, bureaucratic processes, exacerbated by difficulties in finding willing reviewers. Distributed […]
As we conclude this week’s series on corporate social responsibility, we bring you thought-provoking reflections from global business leaders and management scholars […]
There is still a great deal of inequality between the sexes in the workplace. In this episode of the Social Science Bites podcast Paul Seabright combines insights from economics and evolutionary theory to shed light on why this might be so.
When I was a student, I had teachers who spoke about opportunities to study abroad in terms of things like the ability to widen one’s emotional and intellectual horizon.To today’s hardboiled politicians, journalists, and academic managers, these views must seem quaint and laughable.
On Tuesday, Forbes published a case study about a corporate social responsibility strategy that spelled the difference between life and death: Around […]
Faith in the wisdom of the affluent to guide public policy has been sorely tested by the enormous costs in money and human suffering resulting from the Great Recession. My data cast further doubt on the notion that representational inequality arises from the greater knowledge or better judgment of those with higher incomes.
Editor’s note: Today we continue our series on corporate social responsibility with top-tier research that answers key questions in the debate. Have […]
Editor’s note: Today we continue our series on corporate social responsibility, presenting top-tier research that answers key questions in the debate. Be […]
I expect many of you will be aware of the very amusing yet, at the same time, incredibly scary twitter account @academic male…