2020
DOI: 10.37725/mgmt.v23.4474
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Sustainable Academia: Open, Engaged, and Slow Science

Abstract: As we take stock of our new responsibilities to the Journal of M@n@gement and its various contributors, from authors to reviewers, editors, and readers, we also acknowledge the broader challenges that science and society face today. Academic communities have multiplied critics about science’s ‘health’ and ethics in general, or those of management and organization studies in particular. From the institutionalization of imposter syndrome in our fields (Bothello & Roulet, 2019) and a pandemic of burnout (Worl… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…However, we also believe that it takes time and effort to develop research projects, to design and implement DMPs, to publish research in diamond open access journals, and, at the same time, to open data. In that respect, we even more firmly believe in the need for 'sustainable academia' and 'slow science' that we advocated a few years ago (Berkowitz & Delacour, 2020). We would add to that the need to be reflexive and careful about risks of 'subordination of the researched' (Vijay, 2021a, p. 56).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…However, we also believe that it takes time and effort to develop research projects, to design and implement DMPs, to publish research in diamond open access journals, and, at the same time, to open data. In that respect, we even more firmly believe in the need for 'sustainable academia' and 'slow science' that we advocated a few years ago (Berkowitz & Delacour, 2020). We would add to that the need to be reflexive and careful about risks of 'subordination of the researched' (Vijay, 2021a, p. 56).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We believe that there is an unaddressed paradoxical tension between open science and its commercial uses. We view science as a global public good (Berkowitz & Delacour, 2020), yet the very principles of open science allow reuse by organizations, in particular for performance purposes. We at M@n@gement use a Creative Commons CC BY-NC 4.0 license.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Some academics encourage colleagues to travel by train or bicycle (Delmestri, 2019), and journal editors call on peers to fly less (Nature Nanotechnology, 2019). These efforts include calls for 'slow conferencing' and 'slow science' (Berkowitz & Delacour, 2020;Ruddick, 2019). Professor Laurie Zoloth, director of Northwestern University's Centre for Bioethics, Science and Society, recommends scholars skip conferences every seven years (Oppenheimer, 2014).…”
Section: Pressures To Decarbonise and The Role Of Flying In Those Eff...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…HEIs are taking a range of actions such as conducting research into more efficient technologies to reduce emissions and environmental harm of systems and processes (Shields, 2019;Sibbel, 2009); incorporating topics of environmental sustainability in their curricula (Lozano et al, 2015;Adomssent & Michelsen, 2006); and agreeing to and performing comprehensive sustainability audit initiatives (Findler et al, 2019). Many HEIs are also engaging with issues of environmental sustainability and climate change in multidisciplinary ways not limited to environmental science programs (Androff et al, 2017;Sibbel, 2009) and making commitments to reductions and activities to improve environmental sustainability of institutional activities (Calder & Clugstone, 2003;Wright, 2004;Berkowitz & Delacour, 2020).…”
Section: Education and Sustainabilitymentioning
confidence: 99%