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Since the corporate sustainability movement emerged more than 20 years ago, much has been written about how multinational corporations must play an important role in solving the planet’s ecologic
Mankind faces the challenge of transforming the existing global production/consumption/wealth-distribution system from an unjust, unsustainable one into a more just system which the Ear
Many business schools embrace a mission or purpose to develop leaders with a focus on values and principles.
Understanding and developing resilience is becoming increasingly important in business for both leaders and organizations.
The following invited essay by Dr. Michael Garanzini, S.J., is based on a talk Fr.
As writers who have made numerous attempts to create cases (some more successful than others) we are often asked, "how do you find a topic?" or "what topics make good cases?" These questions are
What does Jerusalem have to say to Athens?
Tertullian, a Christian author and apologist in the second century of the Common Era, asked, “What does Athens have to do with Jerusalem?” This comes from hi
Marketing education in Jesuit business schools, as in most other business schools, is mainly oriented towards traditional for-profit business enterprises.
The Journal of Jesuit Business Education is the peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary journal of the Colleagues in Jesuit Business Education (CJBE).
Welcome to Volume 5 of the Journal of Jesuit Business Education!
Outcomes Assessment for Mission: Measuring the Impact of Jesuit Education The accreditation standards of The Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB) make clear the essential
In 2007, our university signed the American College and University Presidents Climate Commitment agreement. At the time, that organization comprised fewer than two dozen schools; now it has hundreds.
What is the proper role of business leaders with regard to sustainability? In this paper, we dialectically bring the disciplines of economics and philosophy to bear on this question.
I want to propose a new patron saint for business people: Peter Faber.
Faculty members across the academy regularly use rubrics for assessing a variety of student work. Such assessments and rubrics are inherently based on the pedagogy employed by the educators.
Few challenges are as formidable as trying to reconcile ethically responsible behavior with the bottom line. Is there a relationship between ethical business practices and business performance?
The Society for Case Research held a preconference workshop to help authors improve their case research skills.
In the spirit of this journal’s invitation to address the questions What’s so?, So what?, and Now what?, this editorial will comment brie"y on possible responses to these three questions—response
In this article, we review the challenges to the current economic system and then proceed by presenting two competing paradigms—the economistic and humanistic paradigms of business.
Entrepreneurship is increasingly being recognized as a significant conduit for bringing about a transformation towards sustainable products and processes.