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Journal Article

The role of autonomy and selection at the gate in flat organizations

Journal of Organization Design 11 (1): 27–29
Subject(s)
Strategy and general management; Technology, R&D management
Keyword(s)
autonomy, remote work, flat organizations
Volume
11
Journal Pages
27–29
ISSN (Online)
2245-408X
Journal Article

Judging the legality of sexually violent tactics: a comparison between prosecuting attorneys in the United States and Colombia

Journal of Sexual Aggression 28 (2): 261–279
Zoë D. Peterson, Monica Perez Trujillo, Ana L. Jaramillo-Sierra (2022)
Subject(s)
Unspecified
Keyword(s)
attorney perceptions, sexual violence, coercive tactics, measurement, cross-cultural research
In order to study sexual violence internationally, it is helpful to understand similarities and differences in how sexual violence is conceptualised across countries. The current study examined prosecuting attorneys’ judgments about which sexual tactics legally qualify as sexual violence in two countries. Attorneys from the U.S. (n = 28) and Colombia (n = 24) evaluated whether 36 tactics would qualify as a sexual offense in their jurisdiction. Although Colombian and U.S. attorneys agreed on the legality of many tactics, Colombian attorneys judged more behaviours as criminal, on average, than U.S. attorneys. Within-country variations suggested that differences were due not only to different legal statutes, but also to different interpretations of laws. Open-ended responses illustrated sources of ambiguity, including lack of clarity about how much coercion is required and which behaviours indicate nonconsent. This suggests that vagueness within legal definitions may allow attorney judgements to be influenced by stereotypes and prejudices.

Practical Impact Statement: This study illustrates the vagueness of legal definitions of sexual violence in two countries—the United States and Colombia. This vagueness provides prosecuting attorneys with substantial power to interpret the law, and in this study, some attorney judgements of legality seemed to be influenced by stereotypes. Greater training for law students and attorneys about the realities of sexual violence may be helpful in undermining belief in rape myths that may inhibit attorneys from prosecuting certain sexual violence cases.
Volume
28
Journal Pages
261–279
ISSN (Online)
1742-6545
ISSN (Print)
1355-2600
Online Article

Four questions corporate executives must answer before deglobalization

Forbes
Olaf Plötner, Bianca Schmitz, Johannes Habel, Claire Cardy (2022)
Subject(s)
Economics, politics and business environment; Strategy and general management
Keyword(s)
corporate structures, industrial companies, globalization, supply chain, headquarters, global trade
ISSN (Print)
0015-6914
Journal Article

Crowdsourcing research questions in science

Research Policy 51 (4): 104491
Susanne Beck, Tiare-Maria Brasseur, Marion Poetz, Henry Sauermann (2022)
Subject(s)
Diversity and inclusion; Health and environment; Technology, R&D management
Keyword(s)
Crowd science, citizen science, crowdsourcing, problem solving, problem finding, agenda setting, organization of science
Scientists are increasingly crossing the boundaries of the professional system by involving the general public (the crowd) directly in their research. However, this crowd involvement tends to be confined to empirical work and it is not clear whether and how crowds can also be involved in conceptual stages such as formulating the questions that research is trying to address. Drawing on five different “paradigms” of crowdsourcing and related mechanisms, we first discuss potential merits of involving crowds in the formulation of research questions (RQs). We then analyze data from two crowdsourcing projects in the medical sciences to describe key features of RQs generated by crowd members and compare the quality of crowd contributions to that of RQs generated in the conventional scientific process. We find that the majority of crowd contributions are problem restatements that can be useful to assess problem importance but provide little guidance regarding potential causes or solutions. At the same time, crowd-generated research questions frequently cross disciplinary boundaries by combining elements from different fields within and especially outside medicine. Using evaluations by professional scientists, we find that the average crowd contribution has lower novelty and potential scientific impact than professional research questions, but comparable practical impact. Crowd contributions outperform professional RQs once we apply selection mechanisms at the level of individual contributors or across contributors. Our findings advance research on crowd and citizen science, crowdsourcing and distributed knowledge production, as well as the organization of science. We also inform ongoing policy debates around the involvement of citizens in research in general, and agenda setting in particular.
With permission of Elsevier
Volume
51
Journal Pages
104491
ESMT Case Study

The NaaS project at the Mobile Tribe

ESMT Case Study No. ESMT–322–0196–1
Subject(s)
Strategy and general management
Keyword(s)
General managers, middle management, cross-functional teams, digital strategy, disruptive business model
The case tells the story of a project at Frontelco (a major telco company in disguise) aiming at defining and piloting a business model (Network as a Service, NaaS) in response to the advancement of a new technology (5G). It is written from the perspective of a “trusted advisor” who had been invited by the protagonist to provide methodological support to the project team. The team, which primarily represents the perspective of product management, spends significant time and effort on developing a methodical approach to their own work, leaving the substantive issue (business model innovation) to be defined only vaguely, under the dominant influence of a few team members. In the follow up to the case we learn that by the time concerns emerge that the team does not seem to have developed any presentable output, they find out that their key competitor has already made significant progress and the technology department, their “internal rival”, has also moved ahead with a concept that allows them to claim ownership for a major corporate-level project.
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Working Paper

The long-run effects of immigration: Evidence across a barrier to refugee settlement

IZA Discussion Paper Series 2022 (March)
Antonio Ciccone, Jan Sebastian Nimczik (2022)
Subject(s)
Economics, politics and business environment
Keyword(s)
immigration, productivity, wages, refugees, long-run effects
JEL Code(s)
O4, O11, R11
Volume
2022
ESMT Working Paper

Mismanaging diagnostic accuracy under congestion

ESMT Working Paper No. 22-01
Mirko Kremer, Francis de Véricourt (2022)
Subject(s)
Management sciences, decision sciences and quantitative methods
Keyword(s)
congestion, diagnostic accuracy, experiments, partially observable markov decision process, path-dependent decision making, undertesting, task completion bias
To study the effect of congestion on the fundamental trade-off between diagnostic accuracy and speed, we empirically test the predictions of a formal sequential testing model in a setting where the gathering of additional information can improve diagnostic accuracy, but may also take time and increase congestion as a result. The efficient management of such systems requires a careful balance of congestion-sensitive stopping rules. These include diagnoses made based on very little or no diagnostic information, and the stopping of diagnostic processes while waiting for information. We test these rules under controlled laboratory conditions, and link the observed biases to system dynamics and performance. Our data shows that decision makers (DMs) stop diagnostic processes too quickly at low congestion levels where information acquisition is relatively cheap. But they fail to stop quickly enough when increasing congestion requires the DM to diagnose without testing, or diagnose while waiting for test results. Essentially, DMs are insufficiently sensitive to congestion. As a result of these behavioral patterns, DMs manage the system with both lower-than-optimal diagnostic accuracy and higher-than-optimal congestion cost, underperforming on both sides of the accuracy/speed trade-off.

 


View all ESMT Working Papers in the ESMT Working Paper Series here. ESMT Working Papers are also available via SSRN, RePEc, EconStor, and the German National Library (DNB).

Pages
40
ISSN (Print)
1866–3494
ESMT Case Study

Wilo SE: Corporate structures in times of de-globalization

ESMT Case Study No. ESMT-321-0193-1
Claire Cardy, Bianca Schmitz, Olaf Plötner, Johannes Habel (2022)
Subject(s)
Strategy and general management
Keyword(s)
Corporate strategy, global trends, organizational structures,
strategic change management
Wilo SE, headquartered in Dortmund, Germany, was a leading supplier of pumps and pump systems for the building services, water management and industrial sectors, which was doing business in more than 50 countries. Based on current global developments in politics, economy, and society, Oliver Hermes, President and CEO of Wilo Group, saw a de-coupling of three tectonic plates centered in China, USA, and Western Europe. At the Wilo management conference in September 2020 Hermes informed stakeholders about the decision to establish a 2nd headquarters in Beijing within the next few months, and possibly to open a 3rd headquarters in the following year in the USA. He stated:

“With the opening of a 2nd headquarters I want to set a sign. Wilo has to keep up with current global developments – whether we like them or not. A stronger regionalization of Wilo is necessary to continue our global success.”

The case text introduces the key measures to establish the 2nd headquarters in China.
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Journal Article

Beyond retail stores: Managing product proliferation along the supply chain

Production and Operations Management 31 (3): 1135–1156
Işık Biçer, Florian Lücker, Tamer Boyaci (2022)
Subject(s)
Management sciences, decision sciences and quantitative methods; Product and operations management
Keyword(s)
Product proliferation, lead-time reduction, process redesign, delayed differentiation
Product proliferation occurs in supply chains when manufacturers respond to diverse market needs by trying to produce a range of products from a limited variety of raw materials. In such a setting, manufacturers can establish market responsiveness and/or cost efficiency in alternative ways. Delaying the point of the proliferation helps manufacturers improve their responsiveness by postponing the ordering decisions of the final products until there is partial or full resolution of the demand uncertainty. This strategy can be implemented in two different ways: (1) redesigning the operations so that the point of proliferation is swapped with a downstream operation or (2) reducing the lead times. To establish cost efficiency, manufacturers can systematically reduce their operational costs or postpone the high-cost operations. We consider a multi-echelon and multi-product newsvendor problem with demand forecast evolution to analyze the value of each operational lever of the responsiveness and the efficiency. We use a generalized forecast-evolution model to characterize the demand-updating process, and develop a dynamic optimization model to determine the optimal order quantities at different echelons. Using anonymized data of Kordsa Inc., a global manufacturer of advanced composites and reinforcement materials, we show that our model outperforms a theoretical benchmark of the repetitive newsvendor model. We demonstrate that reducing the lead time of a downstream operation is more beneficial to manufacturers than reducing the lead time of an upstream operation by the same amount, whereas reducing the upstream operational costs is more favorable than reducing the downstream operational costs. We also indicate that delaying the proliferation may cause a loss of profit, even if it can be achieved with no additional costs. Finally, a decision typology is developed, which shows effective operational strategies depending on product/market characteristics and process flexibility.
Volume
31
Journal Pages
1135–1156
Journal Article

Reverse privatization as a reaction to the competitive environment: Evidence from solid waste collection in Germany

Review of Industrial Organization 60: 217–261
Juri Demuth, Hans W. Friederiszick, Steffen Reinhold (2022)
Subject(s)
Economics, politics and business environment
Keyword(s)
Reverse privatization, solid waste collection, mixed oligopoly, state-owned enterprises, competition law enforcement, logit regression
JEL Code(s)
L33, L44, L88, H44, K21
After earlier waves of privatization, local governments have increasingly taken back control of local service provisions in some sectors and countries and instead started providing those services themselves (reverse privatization). Using a unique panel dataset on the mode of service provision for solid waste collection for German municipalities that cover the years 2003, 2009, and 2015, we investigate the motives for reverse privatization. Our results show that -- in deciding whether to insource or not -- municipalities react to the cost advantages of private suppliers as well as to the competitive environment and municipal activity: There is more switching to insourcing in concentrated markets and in markets with horizontally or vertically related public services. Local interest groups influence this decision as well.
© 2022 Springer
Journal Pages
217–261