Sustainable HRM and Future of Work
In the context of current rapid economic, geopolitical, social, and technological changes, sustainable HRM and adapting to new work environment play a critical role in fostering economic and social development. ISM researchers were among the first scholars to engage in research in this domain and have made substantial contributions to it, such as a paper by Dwertman, Goštautaitė, Kazlauskaitė and Bučiūnienė on corporate benefits of employing persons with disabilities published in Academy of Management Journal (FT list, AJG 4*), a paper by Shao, Goštautaitės, Wang ir Ng (2022). on workforce aging in Personnel Psychology (AJG 4*), etc.
Future research will focus on such subthemes as human capital sustainability (Bučiūnienė & Yerlitas, 2022), employability across life-span and career sustainability (Goštautaitė & Liubertė), caring for employee wellbeing (Kazlauskaitė, Poškutė, Goštautaitė), employment of persons with disability (Bučiūnienė & Lolat), employee volunteering and engagement in NGO activities (Bučiūnienė, Petreikienė, Pranaitytė), HR practice and culture developments in the new work environment (Kazlauskaitė & Jonynienė).
Environmental Effects on Wellbeing and Performance
Built environment plays a relevant role in sustaining employee and public health, wellbeing and performance, building stronger organizations and healthier communities, and protecting the natural environment. ISM researchers have contributed to the attainment of these goals through studies of such sub-themes as physical office environment effects on occupational wellbeing, nature effects on public and individual health, food consumption and cognitive performance. Research output under this theme includes a systemic literature review of office environment effects on occupational wellbeing by Kazlauskaitė, Martinaitytė, Lyubovnikova and Augutytė-Kvedaravičienė published in International Journal of Management Reviews (AJG 3) and a series of papers by Joye on nature effects.
Future research will continue focusing on environmental effects on public and employee health (Joye & Lisauskienė), ethical behaviour (Joye & Muravjovas), and employee well-being and performance (Kazlauskaitė & Augutytė-Kvedaravičienė).
The Effects of Emerging Technologies on the Nature of Work
Emerging technologies (ET) require business model and system reconfiguration. ET adoption is supposed to boost efficiency and economic performance, but it often backfires. Researchers (Bučiūnienė, Goštautaitė, Liubertė, Remeikienė, Qureshi) have examined ET effects (e.g. robotics, IT, 3D printing), organizational challenges of ET adoption and neutralizing of its negative effect on employee well-being, ET adaptability, and the role of HRM in ET adoption. The findings have been presented at top conferences, and papers are in the review process or accepted for publishing in Organization Studies (FT list, AJG 4*), Academy of Management Discoveries (AJG 3), The International Journal of Human Resource Management (AJG 3).
Future research will investigate implementation and outcomes of AI, robotics, 3D printing, and other technologies in health care (robotic surgery), manufacturing, construction, education, etc., and human-ET interaction.
AI Methodologies for Data Management and Decision-Making
ISM is rapidly expanding research under this theme. Akstinaitė, with the world's top scholars in this field, leads this theme. Akstinaitė and Sadler Smith's paper on advanced management research methodologies using computational linguistics and machine learning won the Best Paper Award in Research Methods SIG at 2022 British Academy of Management conference.
Articles based on AI and machine learning methods have been published in top journals such as Journal of Business Ethics (FT-50 list, AJG 4*), Human Resource Management Journal (4* AJG), British Journal of Management (AJG 4), etc. Miniotaitė and Pilkienė project "The use of AI and machine learning solutions for the development of a human resources search, selection, and evaluation platform" applies AI research to management practice.
ISM researchers will continue to expand their research using advanced AI-related methods such as machine learning and computational linguistics. These techniques will be applied in a variety of research settings and contexts. To further strengthen the expertise of ISM researchers in this area, a course on "Using AI/Machine Learning in Research" will be organized in June 2023, which will be taught by Vlachos from University of Lausanne, a renowned expert in the field.
The role of AI in Leadership
A number of leadership and AI-related studies have been conducted at ISM. Sadler-Smith ir Akstinaitė used computational linguistics and machine learning to study leadership hubris. Their findings were published in Organization & Environment (AJG 3). Some ongoing and upcoming studies under this theme will use cutting-edge technology, i.e. deep neural networks, to develop an algorithm for measuring leadership-related abilities at-a-distance, from one’s speech. This research will be conducted by Akstinaitė in collaboration with the world’s leading leadership researcher Antonakis, University of Lausanne (h-index=53). ISM scholars will also seek to contribute to a better understanding of new leadership theories, such as Industry 4.0 leadership, horizontal leadership, virtual leadership, etc.
Leadership and Organizing in the Era of Remote Work
ISM researchers also address leadership and organizing issues in the changing work environment through studies in the context of remote work. Nakrošienė, Bučiūnienė & Goštautaitė were among the first scholars to study remote work. Their paper published in International Journal of Manpower (AJG 2) falls under top 10% most cited works in management. Bučiūnienė & Kazlauskaitė study macro and mezzo-level factors affecting remote work across Europe (forthcoming chapter to be published in Routledge Innovation and Technology Horizons book series). A recent Nordforsk-funded project (2023-2026) will study leadership in the under-researched hybrid work context. Moreover, this 4-year study is to be conducted across three countries: Lithuania, Norway and Sweden.
Facilitating Value Creation and Leadership in Different Contexts
ISM researchers address various value co-creation and leadership topics in different contexts. Value co-creation is studied in the field of education, where Auruškevičienė, Misiūnas, Židonis, Šidlauskienė and Survilaitė study citizen involvement in the co-creation of secondary education services. Alonderienė, Alonderienė, Müller, Chmieliauskas, Pilkienė, Šimkonis et al. investigate value co-creation via project network governance.
Leadership topics are explored in different contexts too. Alonderienė, Müller, Chmieliauskas, Pilkienė, and Šimkonis study horizontal leadership in projects. They have published their research in IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management (AJG 3) and Production Planning & Control (AJG 3). Further, Akstinaitė in collaboration with Sadler-Smith investigated leadership complexities at challenging times, including COVID-19 (Leadership, AJG 2). Minelgaitė & Škudienė (2018) focused on leadership in business in Lithuania and global institutions. Jaškienė & Bučiūnienė explored academic leadership. Ryazanova & Jaškienė provided evidence-based advice for academic leaders on research management (Research Policy, FT50, AJG 4*).
Promoting Health and Sustainable Consumption
Promotion of consumer health and sustainable consumption are highly important aspects of sustainable development contributing to the reduction of negative environmental and social externalities and development of sustainable product markets. ISM researchers have contributed to this research domain by investigating novel approaches to helping consumers make more sustainable decisions and encouraging healthy lifestyles and studying consumer attitude formation to health-related behaviour and responsible consumption. Research output under this theme includes publications in top journals: e.g., a paper by Vohs, Schmeichel, …, Joye, Gineikienė et al. on ego depletion in Psychological Science (AJG 4*), research by Gineikienė, Fennis, Barauskaitė, Van Koningsbruggen on stress and disease threat effects on consumer decision-making in International Journal of Research in Marketing (AJG 4), Personality and Individual Differences (AJG 3), Psychology & Marketing (AJG 3), etc.
Future research will continue addressing sub-themes of responsible consumer behaviour and sustainable consumption, circular consumption, health-related consumer decision-making and habit change (Joye, Barauskaitė, Uždavinytė, Kaminskienė).
Consumer Responses to AI and Digitalization
ISM scholars are studying consumer motivation for AI marketing. Auruškevičienė, Lekavičiūtė & Šidlauskienė are investigating how AI, including the use of intelligent agents and in-app voice assistance, affects consumer behaviour, while Aubel & Joye are studying robot anthropomorphism effects on consumer risk behaviour. These studies were presented at prestigious conferences like American Marketing Association, Society for Consumer Psychology, Academy of Marketing Science, etc. Findings of this research were also published in high-quality academic journals, which highlights their significance and quality.
ET-related consumer behaviour and specifically the impact of digitalization and AI on consumer experiences will be further explored at ISM.
Micro and Macroeconomic Determinants of Growth and Sustainable Development
ISM researchers are studying how monetary and fiscal policies affect sustainable growth and social development. In papers published in Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics (AJG 1) and The Quarterly Review of Economics and Finance (AJG 2), Žukauskas (in collaboration with Hülsmann) examined the effects of monetary policy on financial asset prices. Barauskaitė-Griškevičienė & Nguyen's research in Empirical Economics (AJG 2), Economic Modelling (AJG 2), and International Journal of Finance and Economics (AJG 3) examined aggregate economic fluctuations and direct and indirect network effects. Klimavičienė et al. examined how foreign direct investment affects economic growth. Poškutė's Horizon 2020-funded research on social effects of demographic changes also addressed sustainability. Ginevičius, Noga, Žemaitis et al. examined how electricity consumption affects different industries.
Future research will investigate industry and economic performance determinants and strategies for sustainable economic growth and social equity.
Financial Economics, Financial Technologies and Sustainability
Financial institutions and markets are shaped by economics, technology, and sustainability. Kaminskas, Šarapovas, Kušlys, Hashimoto & Poškutė have contributed to this field by studying macro-financial issues like central bank fiscal policy communication, financial institution development, financial centres, and pension fund systems. Lisauskienė, Darškuvienė, Mariničevaitė, & Katkov examined fintech innovations and investment behavior. Darškuvienė, Pranckėnaitė, Klimavičienė, Misiūnas, Kundelis & Nasteckienė studied corporate finance and governance, including the behavioral effects of company ownership on debt and financial distress. Urban Studies (AJG 3), European Urban and Regional Studies (AJG 3) and other outlets have published their works.
Future research will examine robotization effects on financial investors' behavioral biases, company ownership impact on debt and financial distress, and financial performance and governance effects on sustainability.
Labour Markets, Automation and Economic Growth
ISM has investigated novel approaches to the potential impact of automation on labor markets and employment, trade-offs between economic growth and unemployment (Boyd, Huettinger, Šarapovas, Kušlys, Zirgulis), automation and occupational mobility (Christenko), taxation of robots (Huettinger, Boyd), electoral rules on public R&D (Krūminas), and the socio-economic impact of research and development. International Journal of Social Economics (AJG 1), Futures (AJG 2), Review of Economics and Economic Methodology, and Constitutional Political Economy (AJG 1) have published their research.
Further research on labor markets, employment, and automation will help explain conceptual issues, economic and social issues, and public policy implications of fuller automation.
The Baltic Journal of Management publishes high quality peer-reviewed research on major disciplines in management. Initially launched as a publication outlet for research focussing on the Baltic region, the journal has rapidly grown to publish quality international perspectives on contemporary matters and emerging fields in management.
The Baltic Journal of Management welcomes empirical and conceptual articles, including literature reviews, and encourages research into interdisciplinary, international and comparative standpoints on contemporary management issues.
Coverage includes, but is not restricted to:
The journal operates a double-blind peer review system whereby each paper is reviewed by a minimum of two referees. To avoid processing delays all submitted papers must follow the author guidelines and count between 6000 and 9,000 words in length. Submissions that do not follow the guidelines or are not judged suitable for the standards of the journal will not be considered. For further information please see here.
CALL for papers to a special issue Sustainability marketing and sustainability management: Exploring new perspectives on sustainable development.
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Editor
Prof. Rūta Kazlauskaitė
ISM University of Management and Economics
Arklių g. 18
01305 Vilnius, Lietuva
E-mail ruta.kazlauskaite@archive.ism.lt
Venue
ISM University of Management and Economics
Gedimino ave. 7
Vilnius, LT-01103
About the host university
ISM University of Management and Economics (ISM) is one of the top-ranked business universities in the Baltics. ISM is the only university in Lithuania that holds 4 out of 5 Palmes of Excellence by Eduniversal. ISM is also on a track to prestigious AACSB (Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business) accreditation and a member of EFMD (European Foundation for Management Development).
Founded by BI Norwegian business school in 1999, ISM University of Management and Economics is a Lithuanian private higher education institution that carries out university level studies, business education and scientific research. The primary mission of ISM is to serve as a platform dedicated to high quality business education for students, current and future leaders, executives, entrepreneurs and experts. The university is an active member of the international academic and business community and a highly respected voice in the society. International research is directed at the increasing challenges our society, economy and business are facing and seeks to influence and meet the needs of today's society. ISM has roughly 150 staff members and 2000 students, and 100+ exchange partners. During its 23 years of history, the name of ISM has become closely associated with quality, international experience, prestige, leadership and constant progress.
More information about Vilnius: https://www.govilnius.lt/
Transportation
Vilnius Center, where the University is located, is easily accessible by bus (3G or 88) (~ 30 - 40 min) or taxi (~ 20 min) from International Vilnius Airport. The City Center and accommodations are all within walking distance.
Meeting Chair
Bernadeta Goštautaitė (ISM University of Management and Economics)
Local organizing committee
Bernadeta Goštautaitė (ISM University of Management and Economics)
Jolanta Jaškienė (ISM University of Management and Economics)
Dovilė Petreikienė (ISM University of Management and Economics)
Darius Karvelis (ISM University of Management and Economics)
Guoda Suraninaitė (ISM University of Management and Economics)
Monika Visockytė (ISM University of Management and Economics)
Board of the Age in the Workplace Network
Jürgen Deller, Leuphana University of Lüneburg, Germany
Franco Fraccaroli, University of Trento, Italy
Noreen Heraty, University of Limerick, Ireland
Jean McCarthy, University of Limerick, Ireland
Donald Truxillo, University of Limerick, Ireland
Sara Zaniboni, University of Bologna, Italy, and ETH, Zurich, Switzerland
Mo Wang, University of Florida, USA