WHO ARE THE PARTICIPATING JOURNAL EDITORS IN THIS WORKSHOP?
Fang Lee Cooke, Co-EiC, International
Business Review
International Business Review (IBR) has a long history of publishing papers related to sustainability in international business, including corporate
social responsibility, innovation, poverty reduction through FDI and internationalisation, climate change, etc. IBR has published special issues related to the Sustainable Development Goals of the United Nations and is keen to promote research that addresses
any aspects of the SDGs. We welcome debates and discussions on sustainability issues and explorations of the role of multinational firms and other stakeholders in addressing environmental and social concerns through better governance globally, including global
value chains.
Liqun Wei and Han Jiang, Co-EiC and SE, Asia
Pacific Journal of Management
Officially affiliated with the Asia Academy of Management (AAOM), Asia Pacific Journal of Management publishes original manuscripts addressing the key management
and organizational issues in the Asia Pacific region, including the increasingly important topics related to sustainability. We have published at least one article relating to sustainability in each of the four issues per year recently. Maintaining rigor through
strict review processes and high-quality global reviewers, we are the most prominent management journal published about the fastest growing region in the world where the sustainability related issues are more prominent and have been paid more attention. The
sustainability related topics we publish cover the major academic disciplines in general management including entrepreneurship, human resource management, international business, organizational behaviour, and strategic management.
Nicole F. Richter, EiC, European
Journal of International Management
EJIM is a leading journal with European and global perspectives, devoted to advancing international management research, practice and policy. Papers deal with regional, international or comparative issues affecting
management scholars and practitioners. EJIM attempts to understand why and how firms manage the movement of people, information, money and products in the context of differing political, economic, social, ecological, competitive and technological environments.
It seeks conceptual, theoretical, methodological, empirical, qualitative and review papers advancing the field of international business and management. Against this background, we are interested in studies that tackle social, environmental, and economic sustainability
challenges with an international management focus.
Irina Surdu-Nardella, Co-EiC, Multinational
Business Review
The aim of Multinational Business Review (MBR) is to publish high-quality and innovative research on the multinational enterprise (MNE), and its broad impacts on business, environment, and society. The journal
particularly encourages papers that are cross-disciplinary in nature, and that address new and important issues in international business, such as the balance between purposeful, more sustainable growth and MNE contribution to economic development. The journal
encourages studies which focus on how MNE strategy and investment choices impact on home and host societies, appreciating the role of international business stakeholders as key agents of change and transformation.
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