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Sloan Industry Studies
Workshops The Sloan Industry Studies Workshops Series promotes workshops that further research on topics that cut across industries or otherwise advance scholarship in Industry Studies. The framework that has been established for this program is very flexible. Expressions of interest will be discussed by the Committee for Industry Studies with the idea of identifying workshop topics that might be moved forward and funded as quickly as possible. Workshops that are not funded immediately may be reconsidered especially if there is demonstrated interest in the topic from a cross section of Industry Centers and industry studies Affiliates. Indeed, re-submissions are encouraged when strong interest is evident. The Committee welcomes your ideas for workshops. We expect the range of proposed topics to continue to be substantial. Some workshops may be stimulated by current events or by current discussions over the listserv such as the employment consequences of outsourcing. Workshops also could be used as a way of helping related research projects to be shared across industries. At times, such topics as supply chains, globalization, high performance work systems, wage inequality, industry clusters, homeland security and benchmarking all have been the focus of activity by a cross section of scholars in our community. Workshops could also be developed around aspects of research methodology, such as a methods-based graduate course in business or economics or a workshop on database development. Finally, workshops on such topics as fundraising, marketing, and communications strategies for industry centers are also welcomed. If you are interested in organizing one of the workshops in this series, or if you share such interest with a partner in some other research group or Industry Center, we invite you to submit a brief (2-3 pages) concept paper that outlines the proposed workshop for Committee review. Concept papers should describe a workshop topic, make a brief case for its academic and/or practical importance, and explain how the workshop will promote the future development of Industry Studies. We would like every workshop to produce some sort of "deliverable" that is of value to the Industry Studies community, such as a list of key research questions, research findings, a statement of policy recommendations, an outline for collaborative research, or a report on effective practices in methodology, pedagogy, or center management. Workshops are expected to be small in size (approximately 15-20 participants and 2-3 days) and interdisciplinary. The Committee for Industry Studies would like workshops to have several common elements, the most important being that the workshop focus draws widely on the expertise of our community. We also want each workshop to be goal oriented, in the sense that a product can be widely shared or a research problem can be well articulated as a consequence of the workshop activities. Communication among participants before and during the workshop also will be an important part of the structure. Funding for the workshops will be modest but flexible in that the Workshop Leader will ultimately decide the distribution of expenditures among facilities expenses, administration, travel, lodging, etc. We expect workshop grants typically to be in the range of $25,000 - $35,000. Once a workshop is funded, the Workshop Leader should be willing to write (or co-write) an agenda-setting discussion paper and to monitor and encourage a pre-workshop exchange of ideas and information through a workshop website, listserv, or phone conferences. The Workshop Leader would also invite appropriate participants, chair the workshop, moderate discussion, and ensure that the final workshop deliverable is acceptable to the participants. If you have a possible workshop topic in mind and would like to discuss this program further please contact: Frank Giarratani |
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