Antonio Argandoña is emeritus professor of economics and business ethics at the IESE Business School, University of Navarra. He received his PhD in Economics from the University of Barcelona in 1969. He is a member of the Real Academia de Ciencias Económicas y Financieras de España (Royal Academy of Economics and Finance), chairman of the Comité de Normativa y Ética Profesional (Committee of Standards and Professional Ethics) of the Association of Economists of Catalonia, a member of the Commission on Corporate Social Responsibility and Anti-Corruption of the International Chamber of Commerce of Paris, and a member of the Commission on Control and Transparency of the FC Barcelona.
Caleb Bernacchio is completing doctoral studies in management and business ethics at IESE Business School. Previously he completed an MBA at Louisiana State University and a BPhil at the Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas. His research interests center on the relationship between virtue ethics and the philosophy of action and issues in business ethics, strategy, and organization theory.
Stefano Brusoni is professor of technology and innovation management at ETH Zurich (CH). He received his PhD from the Science Policy Research Unit (SPRU) at the University of Sussex (UK). His research focuses on innovation and technical change, organizational dynamics, and learning processes.
John R. Boatright is the Raymond C. Baumhart, S.J., Professor of Business Ethics Emeritus in the Quinlan School of Business at Loyola University Chicago. He has served as the executive director of the Society for Business Ethics, and is a past president of the society. He was recognized by the Society in 2012 with a lifetime achievement award for service to the field of business ethics, and in 2018 for outstanding scholarly achievement in the field of business ethics. He is the author of the books Ethics and the Conduct of Business and Ethics in Finance, and has edited Finance Ethics: Critical Issues in Theory and Practice. He serves on the editorial boards of Business Ethics Quarterly, Journal of Business Ethics, and Business and Society Review. He received his PhD in philosophy from the University of Chicago.
Rutger Claassen is associate professor of ethics and political philosophy at the Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies of Utrecht University. He obtained his PhD in 2008 from Utrecht University for a dissertation about the moral limits of markets. He was assistant professor at Leiden University and a visiting scholar at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor and Humboldt Universität in Berlin. Part of his research is in the field of socio-economic justice. In his forthcoming monograph, Capabilities in a Just Society: A Theory of Navigational Agency (Cambridge University Press, 2018), he argues for a capability approach centered on a notion of autonomous agency. Another part of his research is in economic ethics: the investigation of the moral value of central economic institutions such as markets, property, and corporations. Currently he is the principal investigator of a research project funded by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) on Private Property and Political Power in a Liberal-Democratic Society. At Utrecht University, Claassen is the program director of the new BA program in philosophy, politics, and economics starting in September 2018. He also regularly publishes articles and books in Dutch for a broader audience.
Robert E. Evert is an assistant professor of management at the US Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Evert’s research interests include family business, entry timing, internationalization, and organizational ethics. His publications have appeared in management and entrepreneurship journals such as Family Business Review and the Journal of Business Ethics.
Anna Gerbrandy is professor of competition law at the Europa Institute of Utrecht University School of Law and member of the Renforce research programme. After graduating from law school and before returning to academia, she worked as European law advocate at one of the leading law firms of the Netherlands and as senior law clerk for the competition law chamber of the district court of Rotterdam. In 2009, she defended her cum laude dissertation on Convergence in Competition Law. Gerbrandy’s current research focus lies in the interplay between competition law and public interests, and more fundamentally in the theoretical foundations of competition law in a changing societal context. More recently her research also includes how competition law responds (and ought to respond) to technological developments. Her institutional responsibilities at Utrecht University cover leadership of both research and education and include responsibility for the multidisciplinary masters programme in law and economics. Gerbrandy holds several positions of trust at societal organizations, including a position of honorary judge at the High Court of Tariffs and Trade for appellate competition law cases in the Netherlands. She publishes both in English and in Dutch.
Barbara La Cara is a PhD candidate in technology and innovation management at ETH Zürich. Her research focuses on social innovation with a particular emphasis on the interplay between market-based and community-based mechanisms to solve societal problems in developing countries. She has also examined the impact of mafia culture on economic interactions through field experiments.
Chris MacDonald is an associate professor at Ryerson University’s Ted Rogers School of Management. A philosopher by training, he is chair of the Law and Business Department and director of the Ted Rogers Leadership Centre. The author of several dozen peer-reviewed articles, he has a long history of providing digital resources for scholars and students in the field of business ethics. He is the cocreator and coeditor of the Business Ethics Journal Review (a free, online, peer-reviewed journal), coauthor of the Concise Encyclopedia of Business Ethics, and the author—for more than a decade—of the Business Ethics Blog.
Michael S. McLeod is an assistant professor of strategic management at Wichita State University. His research interests include organizational ethics, discourse analysis, venture capitalism, and family business. He has coauthored multiple peer-reviewed publications in outlets such as the Journal of Business Ethics and Family Business Review.
Curt B. Moore is the Jordan Chair in Entrepreneurship at the Spears School of Business, Oklahoma State University. Moore’s research generally investigates international entrepreneurship and venture financing phenomena, including cross-border venture capital and foreign initial public offerings (IPOs). He has published in management and entrepreneurship journals, including Strategic Management Journal, Journal of Management, Journal of Business Venturing, Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal, Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, and Family Business Review.
G. Tyge Payne is the Georgie G. Snyder Professor of Strategic Management and Jerry S. Rawls Professor of Management at the Rawls College of Business, Texas Tech University. Payne’s research interests include configurations, family business, organizational ethics, multilevel methods, social capital, and venture capitalism. He has authored or coauthored over sixty peer-reviewed publications, which appear in such outlets as Business Ethics Quarterly, Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, Family Business Review, Journal of Business Ethics, Journal of Management, Journal of Management Studies, Organizational Research Methods, Organization Science, and Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal, among others. He currently serves as the editor-in-chief of Family Business Review.
Tommaso Ramus is an assistant professor at Católica Lisbon School of Business and Economics. He received his PhD from the University of Bergamo and a post-doctoral fellowship from IESE Business School. His research lies at the intersection of organizational theory and social entrepreneurship with a particular emphasis on hybrid organizations and institutional complexity.
Tobey K. Scharding is visiting assistant professor of management and global business at Rutgers Business School. She received her PhD in philosophy from Stanford University. She researches topics in business ethics including finance ethics, ethical issues concerning risk and uncertainty, Kantian ethics, and contractualism. Her work has previously appeared in Business Ethics Quarterly, Georgetown Journal of Law and Public Policy, and is forthcoming in the Journal of Business Ethics. Her book, This is Business Ethics, is in press with Wiley-Blackwell.
Antonino Vaccaro is an associate professor of the Department of Business Ethics and of the Negotiation Unit at IESE Business School. He received a PhD in industrial engineering and management (IST, Lisbon) and two post-doctoral research fellowships respectively in ethics and technology policy (Carnegie Mellon University) and in information ethics (University of Oxford). His research focuses on corporate transparency, hybrid organizations, and organized crime.