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  • 1.  2019 Industry Studies Conference | Call for Papers

    Posted 10-01-2018 09:31

    Call for Papers: 2019 Industry Studies Conference

     

    May 30 - June 1, 2019 in Nashville, TN, USA

     

    Submission Deadline: January 11, 2019

     

     

    The Industry Studies Association (ISA) cordially invites submissions of individual papers and panels of papers for the 2019 Industry Studies Conference to be held May 30th-June 1st, 2019 at the Gaylord Opryland Resort & Convention Center. Industry studies research is grounded in observations of firms and workplaces and in a deep understanding of the markets, institutions, and technologies that shape the competitive environment. It draws on a wide range of academic disciplines and fields including economics, history, sociology, and other social sciences, management, marketing, policy analysis, operations research, engineering, labor markets and employment relations, and other related research and policy areas.

     

    The conference welcomes research from all disciplines that incorporates this approach. ISA is especially interested in organized panels and papers that are unique in their emphasis on observation and insight into a particular industry or that consider how knowledge gained in studying one industry can provide insights into other industries.

     

    2019 Theme:

    Walking the Tightrope to Economic Resilience:

    Balancing Specialization and Diversification

     

    Just as firms and individuals must balance the returns to specialization with the risk mitigation benefits of diversification, so, too, must regions. Among the many ways that regions can thrive economically is by developing depth in a single sector. Such specialization brings with it scale economies as well as the means to self-sustain the supportive clusters and social networks that allow for economies of scope, rich and redundant supply chains, accelerated learning-by-doing, and a snowballing and cross-fertilization of sector-specific knowhow and knowledge-sharing. At the same time, industrial and urban history are rife with examples of withering "rust belt" cities reliant on a very narrow portfolio of industries or perhaps even a single sector as a tax base and as a source of employment.

     

    Key to any region's long-term economic and social prosperity is the ability of its firms, workers, and policymakers to leverage the benefits of specialization while keeping the doors open to geographically novel sectors and the opportunities they bring with them. Few regions have managed to thread this needle as carefully as the Nashville Metropolitan Area, site of this year's annual conference. 

     

    Nashville is best known as "Music City", the cradle of country music and home to the Country Music Hall of Fame. In a broadening of its musical niche, Nashville is now acknowledged as the best place to learn the craft of songwriting, no matter your musical genre.  Plus it is increasingly home to genre-diversifying artist-activists, who work to create new options for musicians in an industry whose old rules are gone for good.

     

    Besides being the state capital, Nashville's concentration of higher education institutions long ago earned it the name of "Athens of the South."  The region has thrived as a manufacturing center ever since becoming the home of the first wave of foreign investment in the U.S. automotive industry.  Nashville also hosts a concentration of cutting-edge healthcare institutions and medical device developers. The metro area's ability to support industries both old and new makes it one of the strongest economies in the U.S.; one recent survey ranked it 4th, behind Austin, Seattle, and Silicon Valley.

     

    Topics of interest relevant to this theme include but are not limited to:

    ·         What sorts of industrial policies and strategies facilitate a region's ability to adapt?

    ·         In what ways does specialization undermine a region's ability to diversify?

    ·         What challenges does a region's longstanding reputation pose for its ability to brand itself more broadly?

    ·         How do seemingly disparate sectors support one another's ability to thrive?

    ·         How does the proximity of policymakers shape industrial evolution?

    ·         What attracts new firms to a region? What causes incumbents to stay and grow?

    ·         How do firms leverage existing networks in one sector to form new networks in another? What role does the mobility of individuals across firms play?

    ·         In what ways does the flexibility (or inflexibility) of a local labor market influence a region's ability to diversify even while maintaining specialization?

     

    The Submission Process

    Researchers may submit abstracts of up to 250 words for single papers or groups of 3-5 abstracts for organized panels. The Program Committee will assign papers accepted as individual submissions to panel sessions. Panel proposals should identify a common theme across the papers included in them (e.g., using one methodology across multiple industries or multiple diverse approaches to a common problem in a single industry). Panels that include practitioners, whether from industry, government, or other organizations, as presenters or discussants are especially welcome. Ties between paper and panel proposals to the 2019 theme described above are not mandatory, but should be highlighted if present.

     

    The deadline for paper and panel submissions is January 11, 2019. Abstracts should be submitted through the Industry Studies Conference website at industrystudiesconference.org.

     

    In addition to the abstract submission, junior (untenured) faculty may also submit full papers to the Rising Star Best Paper Competition and the Best Paper in the Innovation and Entrepreneurship Stream Competition, which is sponsored by the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation. More information on these competitions can be found on the conference website.

     

    Submissions may be made to the research streams listed below. However, these streams are not meant to be exhaustive, and the committee also welcomes submissions in the "General Industry Studies" category. This category may include industry-specific as well as cross-industry papers and panels. The program committee may shift papers and panels from the general industry studies stream to other streams where appropriate.

     

    Research streams:

          Energy, Power, & Sustainability (Coordinator: Adam Fremeth, Ivey Business School, U. of Western Ontario; afremeth@ivey.uwo.ca)

          Healthcare (Coordinator: Tonya Boone, Mason Business School, William & Mary; Tonya.Boone@mason.wm.edu)

          Globalization: Management & Policy Implications (Coordinator: Hiram Samel, MIT Sloan School, Global Economics and Management, hsamel@mit.edu)

          Innovation & Entrepreneurship (Coordinator: Andrew Reamer, Institute of Public Policy, George Washington U., areamer@gwu.edu)

          Technology Management (Coordinator: Raja Roy, New Jersey Institute of Technology, rroy@njit.edu)

          Labor Markets, Organizations, & Employment Relations (Coordinator: Ariel Avgar, ILR School, Cornell; aca27@cornell.edu)

          Supply Networks, Operations and Engineering Management (Coordinator: Benn Lawson, University of Cambridge; b.lawson@jbs.cam.ac.uk)

          General Industry Studies (Coordinators: Adam Seth Litwin, and Liz Reynolds, aslitwin@cornell.edu, lbr@mit.edu)

     

    The conference is open to all researchers. A discounted conference registration fee is available to members of the Industry Studies Association (to become a member, please visit www.industrystudies.org).

     

    Please feel free to contact the Conference Program Leadership below with related questions.

          Adam Seth Litwin, Cornell University (program co-chair, aslitwin@cornell.edu)

          Liz Reynolds, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (program co-chair, lbr@mit.edu)

     

     

    ____________________________________________________________________
    Adam Seth Litwin | Associate Professor of Industrial and Labor Relations
    Department of Labor Relations, Law, and History
    ILR School, Cornell University 
    Twitter: @ProfASLitwin | SSRN Author Page: ssrn.com/author=724509

     

    "No stories without data.  No data without stories."

     



  • 2.  2019 Industry Studies Conference | Call for Papers

    Posted 10-31-2018 12:34

    Call for Papers: 2019 Industry Studies Conference

     

    May 30 - June 1, 2019 in Nashville, TN, USA

     

    Submission Deadline: January 11, 2019

     

     

    The Industry Studies Association (ISA) cordially invites submissions of individual papers and panels of papers for the 2019 Industry Studies Conference to be held May 30th-June 1st, 2019 at the Gaylord Opryland Resort & Convention Center. Industry studies research is grounded in observations of firms and workplaces and in a deep understanding of the markets, institutions, and technologies that shape the competitive environment. It draws on a wide range of academic disciplines and fields including economics, history, sociology, and other social sciences, management, marketing, policy analysis, operations research, engineering, labor markets and employment relations, and other related research and policy areas.

     

    The conference welcomes research from all disciplines that incorporates this approach. ISA is especially interested in organized panels and papers that are unique in their emphasis on observation and insight into a particular industry or that consider how knowledge gained in studying one industry can provide insights into other industries.

     

    2019 Theme:

    Walking the Tightrope to Economic Resilience:

    Balancing Specialization and Diversification

     

    Just as firms and individuals must balance the returns to specialization with the risk mitigation benefits of diversification, so, too, must regions. Among the many ways that regions can thrive economically is by developing depth in a single sector. Such specialization brings with it scale economies as well as the means to self-sustain the supportive clusters and social networks that allow for economies of scope, rich and redundant supply chains, accelerated learning-by-doing, and a snowballing and cross-fertilization of sector-specific knowhow and knowledge-sharing. At the same time, industrial and urban history are rife with examples of withering "rust belt" cities reliant on a very narrow portfolio of industries or perhaps even a single sector as a tax base and as a source of employment.

     

    Key to any region's long-term economic and social prosperity is the ability of its firms, workers, and policymakers to leverage the benefits of specialization while keeping the doors open to geographically novel sectors and the opportunities they bring with them. Few regions have managed to thread this needle as carefully as the Nashville Metropolitan Area, site of this year's annual conference. 

     

    Nashville is best known as "Music City", the cradle of country music and home to the Country Music Hall of Fame. In a broadening of its musical niche, Nashville is now acknowledged as the best place to learn the craft of songwriting, no matter your musical genre.  Plus it is increasingly home to genre-diversifying artist-activists, who work to create new options for musicians in an industry whose old rules are gone for good.

     

    Besides being the state capital, Nashville's concentration of higher education institutions long ago earned it the name of "Athens of the South."  The region has thrived as a manufacturing center ever since becoming the home of the first wave of foreign investment in the U.S. automotive industry.  Nashville also hosts a concentration of cutting-edge healthcare institutions and medical device developers. The metro area's ability to support industries both old and new makes it one of the strongest economies in the U.S.; one recent survey ranked it 4th, behind Austin, Seattle, and Silicon Valley.

     

    Topics of interest relevant to this theme include but are not limited to:

    ·         What sorts of industrial policies and strategies facilitate a region's ability to adapt?

    ·         In what ways does specialization undermine a region's ability to diversify?

    ·         What challenges does a region's longstanding reputation pose for its ability to brand itself more broadly?

    ·         How do seemingly disparate sectors support one another's ability to thrive?

    ·         How does the proximity of policymakers shape industrial evolution?

    ·         What attracts new firms to a region? What causes incumbents to stay and grow?

    ·         How do firms leverage existing networks in one sector to form new networks in another? What role does the mobility of individuals across firms play?

    ·         In what ways does the flexibility (or inflexibility) of a local labor market influence a region's ability to diversify even while maintaining specialization?

     

    The Submission Process

    Researchers may submit abstracts of up to 250 words for single papers or groups of 3-5 abstracts for organized panels. The Program Committee will assign papers accepted as individual submissions to panel sessions. Panel proposals should identify a common theme across the papers included in them (e.g., using one methodology across multiple industries or multiple diverse approaches to a common problem in a single industry). Panels that include practitioners, whether from industry, government, or other organizations, as presenters or discussants are especially welcome. Ties between paper and panel proposals to the 2019 theme described above are not mandatory, but should be highlighted if present.

     

    The deadline for paper and panel submissions is January 11, 2019. Abstracts should be submitted through the Industry Studies Conference website at industrystudiesconference.org.

     

    In addition to the abstract submission, junior (untenured) faculty may also submit full papers to the Rising Star Best Paper Competition and the Best Paper in the Innovation and Entrepreneurship Stream Competition, which is sponsored by the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation. More information on these competitions can be found on the conference website.

     

    Submissions may be made to the research streams listed below. However, these streams are not meant to be exhaustive, and the committee also welcomes submissions in the "General Industry Studies" category. This category may include industry-specific as well as cross-industry papers and panels. The program committee may shift papers and panels from the general industry studies stream to other streams where appropriate.

     

    Research streams:

          Energy, Power, & Sustainability (Coordinator: Adam Fremeth, Ivey Business School, U. of Western Ontario; afremeth@ivey.uwo.ca)

          Healthcare (Coordinator: Tonya Boone, Mason Business School, William & Mary; Tonya.Boone@mason.wm.edu)

          Globalization: Management & Policy Implications (Coordinator: Hiram Samel, MIT Sloan School, Global Economics and Management, hsamel@mit.edu)

          Innovation & Entrepreneurship (Coordinator: Andrew Reamer, Institute of Public Policy, George Washington U., areamer@gwu.edu)

          Technology Management (Coordinator: Raja Roy, New Jersey Institute of Technology, rroy@njit.edu)

          Labor Markets, Organizations, & Employment Relations (Coordinator: Ariel Avgar, ILR School, Cornell; aca27@cornell.edu)

          Supply Networks, Operations and Engineering Management (Coordinator: Benn Lawson, University of Cambridge; b.lawson@jbs.cam.ac.uk)

          General Industry Studies (Coordinators: Adam Seth Litwin, and Liz Reynolds, aslitwin@cornell.edu, lbr@mit.edu)

     

    The conference is open to all researchers. A discounted conference registration fee is available to members of the Industry Studies Association (to become a member, please visit www.industrystudies.org).

     

    Please feel free to contact the Conference Program Leadership below with related questions.

          Adam Seth Litwin, Cornell University (program co-chair, aslitwin@cornell.edu)

          Liz Reynolds, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (program co-chair, lbr@mit.edu)

     

     

    ____________________________________________________________________
    Adam Seth Litwin | Associate Professor of Industrial and Labor Relations
    Department of Labor Relations, Law, and History
    ILR School, Cornell University 
    Twitter: @ProfASLitwin | SSRN Author Page: ssrn.com/author=724509

     

    "No stories without data.  No data without stories."

     



  • 3.  2019 Industry Studies Conference | Call for Papers

    Posted 12-12-2018 17:36

    Dear Colleagues:

    I am just back from a visit to Nashville's Gaylord Opryland Resort and Convention Center. With ample space, natural light, and I kid you not-a river running through the middle of the hotel-it will be a stunning venue for the 2019 Industry Studies Conference, being held May 30th-June 1st. Given that abstract submissions are due in just a month, I thought now would be a great time to tell you more about the venue and some of what have in store for the program.

    With respect to the venue, you'll need to see it to believe it. Seriously, check out the link above, Google it, or find some pics on our Twitter feed at @industrystudies. However you seek it out, you'll see that there are 14 sit-down eateries on site ranging from Italian to Japanese to steak. And, you might want to bring your family to enjoy the resort and to sample the fare: while you are busy learning from your industry studies colleagues, they can take advantage of the brand new indoor water park (it opened while we were there!), catch a show on site, or take one of the shuttle buses downtown to Music Row.

    Speaking of feeding your mind, aside from our usual menu of parallel panels categorized by research track, we are organizing two plenaries that leverage the city's unique industry landscape. One focuses on innovations in healthcare delivery and financing, particularly those developed in Nashville that are now being adopted by systems throughout the country. And, as you can imagine, we would not invite you to Music City without offering you a healthy taste of music and the arts. Towards that end, our local hosts are planning a pre-conference excursion with visits to historic music venues, across a range of music genres (possibilities include: Ryman Auditorium, Bluebird Café, and Jack White's Third Man Records), with time for in-depth conversations with local arts leaders/activists. They are also aiding us in the development of a plenary on evolution and change in the music and creative arts businesses.

    One more feature new to this year's conference..."Idea Incubators." Is there a broad topic that you just want to know more about from an interdisciplinary, industry studies perspective? Perhaps you would like to try to better wrap your head around the ways different industries are leveraging artificial intelligence, aiming to achieve social and environmental sustainability, or managing domestic political risk? If so, we ask that you propose a topic along these lines as the basis of an Idea Incubator thematic discussion. Along with the topic, please suggest four questions that you would ask in order to prompt these discussions, as well as any specific individuals that you believe ought to anchor such a discussion. We will do our best to bring these ideas to fruition as the basis for our first set of "Idea Incubators," an idea that we plan to make a regular feature henceforth in our annual conference program. Please submit your "idea incubators" to our Executive Director, Stephanie Rink at stephanie.rink@industrystudies.org.

    Remember-the submission deadline for abstracts is January 11th, 2019. Check out the call for papers for further information; it is attached to this email and can also found on our website at https://www.industrystudiesconference.org/call-for-papers.

    For proposal questions, please contact either program committee co-chair:
    Adam Seth Litwin, Cornell University, aslitwin@cornell.edu
    Liz Reynolds, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, lbr@mit.edu

    For conference details or questions, please contact our executive director:
    Stephanie Rink, stephanie.rink@industrystudies.org

    I look forward to seeing you in Nashville next year!

    Adam Seth Litwin
    Program Committee Co-Chair
    Industry Studies Association

     



  • 4.  2019 Industry Studies Conference | Call for Papers

    Posted 01-07-2019 14:12

    Greetings, scholars, and happy new year!  Just a reminder that the January 11th abstract submission deadline for this year's Industry Studies conference is fast approaching.  Please see the message below for more information.  Adam

    ____________________________________________________________________
    Adam Seth Litwin | Associate Professor of Industrial and Labor Relations
    Department of Labor Relations, Law, and History
    ILR School, Cornell University 
    Twitter: @ProfASLitwin | SSRN Author Page: ssrn.com/author=724509

     

    "No stories without data.  No data without stories."

     

    Dear Colleagues:

    I am just back from a visit to Nashville's Gaylord Opryland Resort and Convention Center. With ample space, natural light, and I kid you not-a river running through the middle of the hotel-it will be a stunning venue for the 2019 Industry Studies Conference, being held May 30th-June 1st. Given that abstract submissions are due in just a month, I thought now would be a great time to tell you more about the venue and some of what have in store for the program.

    With respect to the venue, you'll need to see it to believe it. Seriously, check out the link above, Google it, or find some pics on our Twitter feed at @industrystudies. However you seek it out, you'll see that there are 14 sit-down eateries on site ranging from Italian to Japanese to steak. And, you might want to bring your family to enjoy the resort and to sample the fare: while you are busy learning from your industry studies colleagues, they can take advantage of the brand new indoor water park (it opened while we were there!), catch a show on site, or take one of the shuttle buses downtown to Music Row.

    Speaking of feeding your mind, aside from our usual menu of parallel panels categorized by research track, we are organizing two plenaries that leverage the city's unique industry landscape. One focuses on innovations in healthcare delivery and financing, particularly those developed in Nashville that are now being adopted by systems throughout the country. And, as you can imagine, we would not invite you to Music City without offering you a healthy taste of music and the arts. Towards that end, our local hosts are planning a pre-conference excursion with visits to historic music venues, across a range of music genres (possibilities include: Ryman Auditorium, Bluebird Café, and Jack White's Third Man Records), with time for in-depth conversations with local arts leaders/activists. They are also aiding us in the development of a plenary on evolution and change in the music and creative arts businesses.

    One more feature new to this year's conference..."Idea Incubators." Is there a broad topic that you just want to know more about from an interdisciplinary, industry studies perspective? Perhaps you would like to try to better wrap your head around the ways different industries are leveraging artificial intelligence, aiming to achieve social and environmental sustainability, or managing domestic political risk? If so, we ask that you propose a topic along these lines as the basis of an Idea Incubator thematic discussion. Along with the topic, please suggest four questions that you would ask in order to prompt these discussions, as well as any specific individuals that you believe ought to anchor such a discussion. We will do our best to bring these ideas to fruition as the basis for our first set of "Idea Incubators," an idea that we plan to make a regular feature henceforth in our annual conference program. Please submit your "idea incubators" to our Executive Director, Stephanie Rink at stephanie.rink@industrystudies.org.

    Remember-the submission deadline for abstracts is January 11th, 2019. Check out the call for papers for further information; it is attached to this email and can also found on our website at https://www.industrystudiesconference.org/call-for-papers.

    For proposal questions, please contact a program committee co-chair:
    Adam Seth Litwin, Cornell University, aslitwin@cornell.edu
    Ingrid Nembhard, University of Pennsylvania, ingridn@wharton.upenn.edu
    Liz Reynolds, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, lbr@mit.edu

    For conference details or questions, please contact our executive director:
    Stephanie Rink, stephanie.rink@industrystudies.org

    I look forward to seeing you in Nashville next year!

    Adam Seth Litwin
    Program Committee Co-Chair
    Industry Studies Association