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  • All HBS Web  (1,117)
    • News  (193)
    • Research  (748)
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    • Multimedia  (18)
  • Faculty Publications  (496)

Show Results For

  • All HBS Web  (1,117)
    • News  (193)
    • Research  (748)
    • Events  (8)
    • Multimedia  (18)
  • Faculty Publications  (496)
← Page 11 of 1,117 Results →
  • November 11, 2022
  • Editorial

Finally Companies Have to Be Upfront about Job Pay Ranges

By: Rosabeth Moss Kanter
The significance of pay transparency laws is their role in moving American workplaces away from bias and closer to equal opportunity. View Details
Keywords: Pay; Salary; Pay Gap; Transparency; Wages; Compensation and Benefits; Recruitment; Equality and Inequality
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Kanter, Rosabeth Moss. "Finally Companies Have to Be Upfront about Job Pay Ranges." CNN.com (November 11, 2022). (Opinion.)

    Do Experts or Collective Intelligence Write with More Bias?

    Co-authored by Feng Zhu

    Which source of information contains greater bias and slant-text written by an expert or that constructed via collective intelligence? Do the costs of acquiring, storing, displaying, and revising information shape those... View Details
    • September 2, 2014
    • Article

    Development of In-Group Favoritism in Children's Third-Party Punishment of Selfishness

    By: Jillian J. Jordan, Katherine McAuliffe and Felix Warneken
    When enforcing norms for cooperative behavior, human adults sometimes exhibit in-group bias. For example, third-party observers punish selfish behaviors committed by out-group members more harshly than similar behaviors committed by in-group members. Although evidence... View Details
    Keywords: Ontogeny; Cooperation; Equality and Inequality
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    Jordan, Jillian J., Katherine McAuliffe, and Felix Warneken. "Development of In-Group Favoritism in Children's Third-Party Punishment of Selfishness." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 111, no. 35 (September 2, 2014): 12710–12715.
    • October 2019
    • Case

    Harlem Capital: Changing the Face of Entrepreneurship (A)

    By: George Serafeim
    Jarrid Tingle and Henri Pierre-Jacques had spent the summer between their first and second years of their Harvard Business School MBA program fund raising for their start-up venture capital (VC) firm, Harlem Capital Partners. Harlem Capital was founded upon the... View Details
    Keywords: Impact Investing; Gender Bias; Gender Inequality; Minority Representation; Entrepreneurial Finance; Investment Management; Investing; Inequality; Race And Ethnicity; Black Entrepreneurs; Black Inventors; Black Leadership; Venture Investing; Fund Raising; Venture Capital; Entrepreneurship; Diversity; Gender; Race; Equality and Inequality; Equity; Mission and Purpose; Investment Funds; Financial Services Industry; United States
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    Serafeim, George, and David Freiberg. "Harlem Capital: Changing the Face of Entrepreneurship (A)." Harvard Business School Case 120-040, October 2019.
    • 19 Jul 2021
    • News

    How Video Interviews Can Help Companies Hire More Quickly and Effectively

      Do Experts or Collective Intelligence Write with More Bias? Evidence from Encyclopædia Britannica and Wikipedia

      Organizations today can use both crowds and experts to produce knowledge. While prior work compares the accuracy of crowd-produced and expert-produced knowledge, we compare bias in these two models in the context of contested knowledge, which involves subjective,... View Details
      • 30 Sep 2016
      • News

      Google Is Ripe for Trump’s Sore-Loser Conspiracy Theories

      • 30 Jun 2015
      • Video

      Gender Differences in Health, Wellness, and Healthcare

      • 25 May 2023
      • Blog Post

      Interview Strategies to Connect with a Wider Range of Candidates

      Are your organization’s interview processes inclusive and equitable? Or, are there more opportunities to counter bias in your interviews and welcome candidates with a variety of backgrounds and experiences? The following recommendations... View Details
      Keywords: All Industries
      • Article

      Inaccurate Group Meta-Perceptions Drive Negative Out-Group Attributions in Competitive Contexts

      By: J. Lees and M. Cikara
      Across seven experiments and one survey (n = 4,282), people consistently overestimated out-group negativity towards the collective behaviour of their in-group. This negativity bias in group meta-perception was present across multiple competitive (but not cooperative)... View Details
      Keywords: Intergroup Competition; Psychology; Political Polarization; Judgment And Decision-making
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      Lees, J., and M. Cikara. "Inaccurate Group Meta-Perceptions Drive Negative Out-Group Attributions in Competitive Contexts." Nature Human Behaviour 4, no. 3 (March 2020): 279–286.
      • 13 Jul 2011
      • News

      Racism As A Zero-Sum Game

      • 23 Jul 2020
      • News

      The Economics of Remote Work

      • 2023
      • Working Paper

      The Benefits of Revealing Race: Evidence from Minority-owned Local Businesses

      By: Abhay Aneja, Michael Luca and Oren Reshef
      Is there latent demand to support Black-owned businesses? To explore, we analyze a new feature that made it easier to identify Black-owned restaurants on a large online platform. We find that labeling restaurants as “Black-owned” increased customer engagement and... View Details
      Keywords: Black-owned Businesses; Race; Prejudice and Bias; Ownership; Knowledge Dissemination; Digital Platforms; Consumer Behavior; Food and Beverage Industry
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      Aneja, Abhay, Michael Luca, and Oren Reshef. "The Benefits of Revealing Race: Evidence from Minority-owned Local Businesses." Harvard Business School Working Paper, No. 23-042, January 2023. (Revised September 2023.)
      • 15 Dec 2010
      • News

      How to Build a Brand Like Corona

        Ideological Segregation among Online Collaborators: Evidence from Wikipedians

        Do online communities segregate into separate conversations about “contestable knowledge”? We analyze the contributors of biased and slanted content in Wikipedia articles about U.S. politics, and focus on two research questions: (1) Do contributors display... View Details

        • September 2020 (Revised February 2024)
        • Teaching Note

        Artea (A), (B), (C), and (D): Designing Targeting Strategies

        By: Eva Ascarza and Ayelet Israeli
        Teaching Note for HBS No. 521-021,521-022,521-037,521-043. This collection of exercises aims to teach students about 1)Targeting Policies; and 2)Algorithmic bias in marketing—implications, causes, and possible solutions. Part (A) focuses on A/B testing analysis and... View Details
        Keywords: Targeted Advertising; Targeting; Race; Gender; Diversity; Marketing; Customer Relationship Management; Prejudice and Bias; Analytics and Data Science; Retail Industry; Apparel and Accessories Industry; Technology Industry; United States
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        Ascarza, Eva, and Ayelet Israeli. "Artea (A), (B), (C), and (D): Designing Targeting Strategies." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 521-041, September 2020. (Revised February 2024.)
        • 2024
        • Working Paper

        What Is Newsworthy? Theory and Evidence

        By: Luis Armona, Matthew Gentzkow, Emir Kamenica and Jesse M. Shapiro
        We study newsworthiness in theory and practice. We focus on situations in which a news outlet observes the realization of a state of the world and must decide whether to report the realization to a consumer who pays an opportunity cost to consume the report. The... View Details
        Keywords: News; Mathematical Methods; Prejudice and Bias; Media and Broadcasting Industry
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        Armona, Luis, Matthew Gentzkow, Emir Kamenica, and Jesse M. Shapiro. "What Is Newsworthy? Theory and Evidence." NBER Working Paper Series, No. 32512, May 2024.
        • Article

        Political Skill: Explaining the Effects of Nonnative Accent on Managerial Hiring and Entrepreneurial Investment Decisions

        By: Laura Huang, Marcia Frideger and Jone L. Pearce
        We propose and test a new theory explaining glass-ceiling bias against nonnative speakers as driven by perceptions that nonnative speakers have weak political skill. Although nonnative accent is a complex signal, its effects on assessments of the speakers' political... View Details
        Keywords: Spoken Communication; Prejudice and Bias; Competency and Skills; Selection and Staffing; Entrepreneurship; Investment; Decisions
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        Huang, Laura, Marcia Frideger, and Jone L. Pearce. "Political Skill: Explaining the Effects of Nonnative Accent on Managerial Hiring and Entrepreneurial Investment Decisions." Journal of Applied Psychology 98, no. 6 (November 2013): 1005–1017.
        • 13 Oct 2020
        • News

        Questions raised about conflicts of interest around Biden son-in-law

        • 13 Dec 2012
        • News

        The Pregnancy Penalty: How Working Women Pay for Having Kids

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