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Koji managed two stores and an e-commerce site for a New York subsidiary of a Japanese apparel company. It designed and sold jeans and denim products in its own retail chain and online stores.
In response to employee requests, Tony Treanor, Director of Human Resources at Northwestern Counseling & Support Services (NCSS), was faced with making an important policy decision about perm
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.
The Journal of Jesuit Business Education is the peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary journal of the Colleagues in Jesuit Business Education (CJBE).
Catholic Universities frequently seek to anchor students’ educational experience in the spiritual charism of a founding religious order (Wilcox et al., 2013).
Few authors have articulated an Ignatian perspective on leadership.
Welcome to Volume 6 of the Journal of Jesuit Business Education (JJBE). On this ve-year anniversary of the launch of the Journal, we pause to consider our brief history.
Critics of contemporary business education are growing in number and their calls for reform are getting louder and more urgent.
Colleges of Business at Jesuit universities strive to be the best.
Incorporating sustainability topics in the Jesuit business school classroom highlights stewardship of the earth’s nite resources, a key application of Jesuit values.
The Hora and Tempus Metaphor case is designed to stimulate thinking, demonstrate the sort of thinking that can be done on an object, provide a platform for considering the management of innovation in
Cases in Corporate Ethics 1.1: The year 2008 will go down in American and global economic history as the worst since 1931.
Cases in Corporate Ethics 1.2: Hundreds of thousands of migrants who are lucky enough to survive the journey to mainland Europe, land first on the so-called frontline states of Spain, Italy, Malta and
Cases in Corporate Ethics 1.3: In Khetolai, the village closest to the Pokhran nuclear test site in Rajasthan, India, cancer is felling village people and cattle, and nobody seems to care.
Cases in Corporate Ethics 2.1: By October 2000, Enron became the pioneer and trendsetter of energy sector corporate aggressive accounting and insider trading irregularities.
Cases in Corporate Ethics 2.2: On December 25, 2008, Satyam demands an apology and a full explanation from the World Bank for the statements, which damaged investor confidence, according to the outsou