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Behavioral Strategy: West Meets East

Advance your work in a collegial atmosphere Act by July 22


Research in management revolves around firms & markets, operating at a macro-meso level, but necessitates assumptions about the behavior of individuals. The Behavioral Strategy workshop at AoM is a forum to deliberate realistic, parsimonious & generalizable theories linking micro-behavior to macro-outcomes in organizations & markets. Back for the second year, it features an expanded panel of top scholars in the broad research area of behavioral strategy. Speakers will discuss what constitutes behavioral strategy, provide examples of research & suggest future research opportunities. Participants will develop their own work in dialogs on substance & method. We expect a diverse crowd from economics, psychology, sociology & organizational theory, utilizing methods such as experiments, simulations, archival data & qualitative fieldwork. Advance Your Own Work! Submit an Abstract! To have your work discussed, submit a 1,000 word summary, including topic, method, expected contribution & pressing challenges. Stand a chance to win the Best Behavioral Strategy Work in Progress award. Send your abstract by July 22, 2011 to mbehstrategy@gmail.com Register to Attend If you submit a paper or just come to listen, please register early. Seating is limited!
Michael J. Prietula Emory U. Rhonda K. Reger U. of Maryland Violina Rindova U. of Texas at Austin

Philip Bromiley U. of California, Irvine

Emilio J. Castilla MIT

Jerker C. Denrell U. of Oxford

Teppo Felin Brigham Young U.

Giovanni Gavetti Harvard U.

Gerard P. Hodgkinson U. of Leeds

Theresa K. Lant Pace U.

Michael Lenox U. of Virginia

Joseph Porac New York U.

Zur Shapira New York U.

Mary Tripsas Harvard U.

Michael Shayne Gary Australian School of Business

Sheen S. Levine MIT

Thanks to this great PDW, I was able to finish my PhD at Cambridge and will become an Assistant Professor at Warwick Business School, teaching Behavioral Strategy!
Chengwei Liu, Oxford Winner of the 2010 Most Promising Paper in Behavioral Strategy

I'm in love with my dissertation topic! One PDW can make a PhD student fall in love with her dissertation topic; quite an achievement, I believe.
Shoko Kato, Syracuse

I found the roundtable discussions and the panel expert opinions to be extremely beneficial As a plus, I got to meet other people working in the area of behavioral strategy
Elizabeth Reusch, Purdue

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