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  • All HBS Web  (5,434)
    • People  (13)
    • News  (2,025)
    • Research  (2,263)
    • Events  (33)
    • Multimedia  (173)
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← Page 42 of 5,434 Results →
  • 09 Aug 2021
  • Research & Ideas

OneTen: Creating a New Pathway for Black Talent

Americans launch careers in the next 10 years by “cultivating a comprehensive system that focuses on skills first and enables greater opportunities for earned success.” The hope is that this approach will lift up high-potential Black... View Details
Keywords: by Rawi E. Abdelal, Katherine Connolly Baden, and Boris Groysberg
  • 12 Oct 1999
  • Research & Ideas

It Came in the First Ships: Capitalism in America

one long entrepreneurial adventure. Even down to the present day, more Americans have probably made fortunes from the appreciation of real estate values than from any other source. But land is only the starting place for the epochal drama... View Details
Keywords: by Thomas K. McCraw
  • 30 Jan 2014
  • HBS Seminar

Rebecca Henderson, Harvard Business School

  • 2010
  • Working Paper

Men as Cultural Ideals: How Culture Shapes Gender Stereotypes

By: Amy J.C. Cuddy, Susan Crotty, Jihye Chong and Michael I. Norton
Three studies demonstrate how culture shapes the contents of gender stereotypes, such that men are perceived as possessing more of whatever traits are culturally valued. In Study 1, Americans rated men as less interdependent than women; Koreans, however, showed the... View Details
Keywords: Prejudice and Bias; Perception; Values and Beliefs; Gender; Culture; Power and Influence
Citation
Read Now
Related
Cuddy, Amy J.C., Susan Crotty, Jihye Chong, and Michael I. Norton. "Men as Cultural Ideals: How Culture Shapes Gender Stereotypes." Harvard Business School Working Paper, No. 10-097, May 2010.
  • 21 Jan 2022
  • Blog Post

Tipping Point: Investing in the Women of Kenya’s Coffee Farms

supply chain are the unseen farm laborers—most of them women—who tend the coffee trees each day on the hillsides of rural Kenya. Margaret Nyamumbo (MBA 2016) founded Kahawa 1893 in 2017 to shorten the distance between these Kenyan farmers and View Details
  • 26 Jun 2017
  • Research & Ideas

How Cellophane Changed the Way We Shop for Food

development of self-service merchandising systems in American grocery stores, but also revealing how cellophane manufacturers tried to control the narrative of how women buy food. “Cellophane changed how people shopped,” says Ai Hisano,... View Details
Keywords: by Carmen Nobel; Food & Beverage; Retail; Advertising
  • 22 May 2024
  • News

Harvard Business School Announces 2024-25 Leadership Fellows

    David S. Scharfstein

    David Scharfstein is the Edmund Cogswell Converse Professor of Finance and Banking at Harvard Business School, where he has taught since 2003. He currently teaches a course on financial intermediation in the MBA program. Scharfstein has written on a wide range of... View Details

    Keywords: banking
    • 25 Jun 2007
    • Research & Ideas

    HBS Cases: Beauty Entrepreneur Madam Walker

    By 1910, however, with the new name Madam C.J. Walker, Breedlove had accrued a sizable fortune and considerable influence. This daughter of adversity was now well known and respected among the nation's African Americans as a savvy... View Details
    Keywords: by Martha Lagace; Beauty & Cosmetics
    • 11 May 2016
    • Research & Ideas

    Fix This! Why is it so Painful to Buy a New Car?

    dealers. Lexus wants to experiment with Saturn-like “no-haggle” pricing, responding to complaints, especially from younger-generation buyers, that negotiation is frustrating, time consuming, and not at all transparent. Dealers, meanwhile, like things the way they are.... View Details
    Keywords: by Sean Silverthorne; Auto
    • 26 Jun 2017
    • News

    How Cellophane Changed the Way We Shop for Food

      Vincent Pons

      TO LEARN MORE ABOUT VINCENT PONS, CONSULT HIS WEBSITE.

      Vincent Pons is... View Details

      • 15 Sep 2016
      • News

      LeBron James Helps Young Entrepreneurs In 'Cleveland Hustles'

      • 01 Nov 2022
      • What Do You Think?

      Why Aren’t Business Leaders More Vocal About Immigration Policy?

      (iStockphoto/Sundry Photography) Most people agree that US immigration policy is a mess. At times, it is hard to even know what it is. Immigration policy differences divide us as a nation and produce a great deal of misinformation. They have resulted in more than 10... View Details
      Keywords: by James Heskett
      • Video

      Unite–Serve–Lead: The Founding and Impact of the Harvard Business School African-American Student Union

        Marco E. Tabellini

        Marco Tabellini is an assistant professor in the Business, Government, and International Economy unit and is affiliated with the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), the Center for Economic Policy Research (CEPR), the Centre for Research... View Details

        • 11 May 2016
        • News

        Fix This! Why is it so Painful to Buy a New Car?

          Jonathan L. Wallen

          Jonathan Wallen is an Assistant Professor of Finance in the Finance Unit and teaches Finance 1 to MBA students.

          Professor Wallen’s research centers on financial intermediation and its intersection with asset pricing, currency markets,... View Details

          • 21 Jul 2016
          • News

          White people think racism is getting worse. Against white people

          • November 2012
          • Article

          An Age Penalty in Racial Preferences

          By: Deborah A. Small, Devin G. Pope and Michael I. Norton
          We document an age penalty in racial discrimination: charitable behavior toward African American children decreases-and negative stereotypical inferences increase-with the age of those children. Using data from an online charity that solicits donations for school... View Details
          Keywords: Stereotyping; Charitable Giving; Prejudice; Prosocial Behavior; Philanthropy and Charitable Giving; Age; Race; Prejudice and Bias
          Citation
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          Related
          Small, Deborah A., Devin G. Pope, and Michael I. Norton. "An Age Penalty in Racial Preferences." Social Psychological & Personality Science 3, no. 6 (November 2012): 730–737.
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