Search
Discipline / Topic
Language
Material type
Audience
Length
Teaching Notes
Publisher
Building upon our past “From the Editor” articles that focused on cases in the classroom (Peters, Cellucci, and Ford, 2015; Cellucci, Peters, and Woodruff, 2015), the purpose of this ar
What does the politics of anger and cynicism that characterizes the 2016 U.S. presidential primary have to do with big business?
The Journal of Jesuit Business Education is the peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary journal of the Colleagues in Jesuit Business Education (CJBE).
Faculty at Jesuit institutions may understand the fundamental drivers of a Jesuit education.
In Spring 2015, a three-member team comprised of two business faculty and the Director for the Center for Mission and Identity from a Midwest Jesuit university designed an international immersion
We envision and propose a Jesuit “knowledge network” to facilitate the work of building a transformative Jesuit business education through vibrant and ongoing global dialogue.
This paper makes a case for expanding the role of the imagination in whole person education. Imagination, grounded in faith, serves the promotion of justice.
This paper contributes to Father Pedro Arrupe’s (1973) call to the Jesuit educational apostolate to consider new analytical tools and approaches to help dismantle social injustice in our world.
The aim of this article is to familiarize readers with and further explore the Society of Jesus’ (Jesuit) university mission, as well as identify its key challenges and prior- ities.
Thus, for this issue, our “From the Editors” article focuses on points made during the workshops.
The idea of establishing an IAJBS journal focusing on global sustainability emerged the following year at the end of the 2010 World Forum at Ateneo de Manila University.
This article examines Pope Francis’ encyclical letter, Laudato si’, from the perspective of a spirituality of presence, which it relates to resiliency, or the ability of organizations to respond
Climate change is compelling cities to become resilient in the face of a wider range of meteorological phenomena.
In a world greatly in need of healing, today’s leaders acting as shamans could potentially bring the shaman’s ancient wisdom to the effort to create a more sustainable, just, and equitable world.
This study explores a management education model to help integrate sustainable development ideas into university curricula and programs.
A sufficient response to the threats posed by climate change presents a leadership challenge proportional in scale with the urgency and complexity of wartime mobilization.
In Vol. 33 (1), we focused the discussion on cases in the classroom, and we asserted that cases offer value for student learning (Peters, Cellucci, and Ford, 2015).
Business Schools have typically approached ethical and/or sustainability aspects of their curriculum as complements to the traditional business disciplines.
Ignatian Pedagogy has been an integral part of Jesuit education, functioning as an anchor that has guided teaching and pedagogical research in Jesuit univer- sities in many areas, such as service lear
Whoever thought of the theme of “accompanying” for the Colleagues in Jesuit Business Education (CJBE) conference in San Francisco (July 2014) should be congratulated.