Conflict Management CM

 View Only

Re-send: Call for nominations for 2016 CMD Most Influential Paper Award

  • 1.  Re-send: Call for nominations for 2016 CMD Most Influential Paper Award

    Posted 03-07-2016 05:01
    If you received a hard-to-read version of this, apologies...apparently the listserv isn't too keen on HTML formatting. Trying again with plain text; thanks for your patience.

    AoM CONFLICT MANAGEMENT DIVISION
    CALL FOR AWARD NOMINATIONS
    INFLUENTIAL ARTICLE/CHAPTER PUBLISHED 2008-2011


    Which conflict-relevant articles have inspired you? Which have influenced your work? Which have made a notable impact on the field? Has one of your own articles been important to the field of conflict management? Please bring such papers to our attention!

    The Influential Article/Chapter Award is given each year to an article or chapter published in the recent past that has already made a significant and influential contribution to research literature domains encompassed within the Conflict Management Division (CMD). We invite your nominations for the award to be given in 2016.

    Each year, papers eligible for the award will have been published during a window of four calendar years, the ending boundary of which is five years in the past. To be considered for the award to be given in 2016, papers must have appeared in print with a publication date no earlier than 2008 and no later than 2011.

    (Note: For journals, publication date means the year one would find in a citation to the article in print, not an online publication date. For a chapter in a volume, publication date means the copyright date of the volume).

    This year's award committee (Joey Cheng, Tyler Okimoto, Jen Overbeck, Madan Pillutla, and Naomi Rothman) will generate nominations by reviewing important journals in the field. We also seek nominations of specific papers from members of the Conflict Management Division.

    Eligible papers are those that fit in the division’s subject domain, which encompasses a wide range of topics and methodologies. The CMD domain includes:

    • The nature and management of conflicts at the individual, group, organizational, inter-organizational and societal level
    • Power processes including influence, coalitions, coercion, deterrence, and persuasion
    • Bargaining and negotiation, negotiator characteristics and behaviors
    • Collaboration and competition
    • Third party interventions (such as facilitation, arbitration, mediation)
    • Distributive and procedural justice and dispute resolution procedures

    Possible indicators of influence on the field might include citation count, generative impact, and wide use in doctoral seminars, among others. We encourage nominations of articles that you have used in doctoral seminars or that have been important in guiding your own research. Self nominations are welcome.

    To nominate a paper send a complete citation and pdf of the paper to the award committee chair, Jen Overbeck (j.overbeck@mbs.edu) by April 15, 2016. Please include brief comments on why you think the article you are nominating deserves consideration.

    The winning paper will be announced and its author(s) recognized during the division's business meeting at the Academy of Management conference in Anaheim in August, 2016.


    CMD INFLUENTIAL ARTICLE AWARD -- PAST WINNERS

    Award given in 2015 (for article published in years 2007 – 2010):

    Bowles, H.R., Babcock, L., & Lai, L. (2007). Social incentives for gender differences in the propensity to initiate negotiations: Sometimes it does hurt to ask. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 103: 84-103. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.obhdp.2006.09.001

    Award given in 2014 (for article published in years 2006 – 2009):
    Aquino, K., Tripp, T.M., Bies, R.J. (2006). Getting even or moving on? Power, procedural justice, and types of offense as predictors of revenge, forgiveness, reconciliation, and avoidance in organizations. Journal of Applied Psychology, 91, 653-658.

    Award given in 2013 (for article published in years 2005 – 2008):
    Curhan, J.R., Elfenbein, H.A., & Xu, H. (2006). What do people value when they negotiate? Mapping the domain of subjective value in negotiation. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 91: 493-512.

    Award given in 2012 (for article published in years 2004-2007):
    Wendi L. Adair and Jeanne M. Brett. (2005). The Negotiation Dance: Time, Culture, and Behavioral Sequences in Negotiation. Organization Science, 16: 33-51.

    Award given in 2011 (for article published in years 2003 – 2006):
    Kim, P.H., Ferrin, D.L., Cooper, C.D., & Dirks, K.T. (2004). Removing the shadow of suspicion: The effects of apology versus denial for repairing competence- versus integrity-based trust violations. Journal of Applied Psychology, 89, 104-118

    Award given in 2010 (for article published in years 2002 – 2005):
    van Kleef, G.A., De Dreu, C.K.W.; Manstead, A.S.R. (2004). The interpersonal effects of anger and happiness in negotiations. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 86, 57-76

    Award given in 2009 (for article published in years 2001 – 2004):
    De Dreu, C.K.W., & Weingart, L.W. (2003). Task versus relationship conflict, team performance, and team member satisfaction: A meta-analysis. Journal of Applied Psychology, 88, 741-749.

    Award given in 2007 (for article published in years 2000 – 2003):
    Jehn, K.A., Northcraft, G., & Neale, M. (1999). Why differences make a difference: A field study of diversity, conflict, and performance in workgroups. Administrative Science Quarterly, 44, 741-763.

    Award given in 2006 (for article published in years 1999 – 2002):
    Miller, D., & Ratner, R. (1998). The disparity between the actual and assumed power of self-interest. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 74, 53-62.

    Award given in 2005 (for article published in years 1998 – 2001):
    Chatman, J., J. Polzer, S. Barsade, & Neale, M. (1998). Being different yet feeling similar: The influence of demographic composition and organizational culture on work processes and outcomes. Administrative Science Quarterly, 43, 749-780.

    Award given in 2004 (two winners) (for article published in years 1997 – 2000):
    Jehn, K.A. (1995). A multi-method examination of the benefits and detriments of intragroup conflict. Administrative Science Quarterly, 40, 256-282
    Mayer, R.C., Davis, J.H., & Schoorman, F.D. (1995). An integrative model of organizational trust. Academy of Management Review, 20, 709-734

    Award given in 2001 (for article published in years 1996 – 1999):
    Robinson, R. J., Keltner, D., Ward, A., & Ross, L. (1995). Actual versus assumed differences in construal: Naive realism in intergroup perception and conflict. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 68, 404-417.

    Award given in 1999 (for article published in years 1995 – 1998):
    Friedman, R.A., & Podolny, J. M. (1992). Differentiation of boundary spanning roles: Labor negotiations and implications for role conflict. Administrative Science Quarterly, 37, 28-47.

    Award given in 1998 (for article published in years 1994 – 1997):
    Carnevale, P. J. & Pruitt, D. G. (1992). Negotiation and Mediation. Annual Review of Psychology, 43, 531-582.

    ***************************************
    This message was sent to you because you are subscribed to CMDNET which is an electronic list sponsored by the Conflict Management Division of the Academy of Management.

    Please do not post messages with attached files. Commercial messages or spammed messages are not allowed on the list. The use of auto-responder "out-of-office" messages may also lead to your removal from the list.

    You can manage your list subscription on the following page:
    http://aomlists.pace.edu/scripts/wa.exe?SUBED1=cmdnet&A=1

    If you have problems with your subscription or messages posted to the list, please contact the list manager Eric Neuman (EricNeuman@creighton.edu).