Faculty
Knowledge into action: Preparing the next generation of family business leaders
The Smith Family Business Initiative (SFBI) understands family business—how it operates, what makes it unique, and the impact it has on the global economy.
Present Value: Perspectives on COVID-19
Faculty members Andrew Karolyi, Lynn Wooten, Li Chen, Vishal Gaur, and Kaitlin Woolley discuss business impacts of COVID-19.
Plan now for a new, post-COVID-19 world, urges top Bain executive Hernan Saenz III, MBA/MILR ’98
Senior leaders need to both manage through the COVID-19 crisis and redefine business models and strategy for a post-pandemic world.
Present Value: Ryan Guggenmos and Kristina Rennekamp discuss the human side of accounting
Professors Guggenmos and Rennekamp discuss behavioral accounting research and analyze the impact of diverse investment communications.
Do People Regret Their Unhealthy Behaviors?
Regret you feel before you indulge may be higher than what you’ll feel afterwards, according to new research by Manoj Thomas and Helen Chun.
Present Value: Robert Frank discusses his new book, Under the Influence: Putting Peer Pressure to Work
By Maria Castex, MBA ’21 Present Value, an independent editorial project produced and hosted by Johnson students, had the pleasure of interviewing Robert H. Frank, the Henrietta Johnson Louis Professor […]
- Center for Sustainable Global Enterprise
- Energy and Environment
- Faculty
- Sustainable Global Enterprise
Reducing the “invisible burden” of overtourism
As global tourism grows, the tolls on infrastructure threaten natural and cultural icons reports the Center for Sustainable Global Enterprise.
Present Value: Eswar Prasad and Andrew Karolyi discuss emerging markets and cryptocurrency
Present Value interviews Eswar Prasad and Andrew Karolyi, Cornell economics professors with expertise in emerging markets and finance.
Under the Influence: How behavioral contagion can drive positive social change
Others’ choices affect our own and have enormous economic, social, and environmental consequences, argues Robert H. Frank in his new book.