

Business Scholarship Podcast
Andrew Jennings
Interdisciplinary conversations about new works in the broad world of business research.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Oct 12, 2023 • 35min
Ep.197 – Laura Boudreau and Ada González-Torres on Detecting Harassment
Laura Boudreau, assistant professor of economics at the Columbia University Graduate School of Business, and Ada González-Torres, assistant professor of economics at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, join the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss their paper Monitoring Harassment in Organizations, which they co-authored with Sylvain Chassang of Princeton University and Rachel Heath of the University of Washington. In this paper the authors use a randomized control trial to demonstrate survey methods for detecting harassment and other interpersonal misconduct in the workplace.
This episode is hosted by Andrew Jennings, associate professor of law at Emory University, and was edited by Brynn Radak, a law student at Emory University.

Sep 26, 2023 • 23min
Ep.196 – Guha Krishnamurthi on Caste Discrimination
Guha Krishnamurthi, associate professor of law at the University of Maryland, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss his essay Title VII and Caste Discrimination, which he co-authored with Charanya Krishnaswami. The essay introduces the South Asian caste system and analyzes the experience of caste discrimination in U.S. workplaces, along with remedies against caste discrimination under existing and new federal and state legislation.
This episode is hosted by Andrew Jennings, associate professor of law at Emory University, and was edited by Brynn Radak, a law student at Emory University.

Sep 20, 2023 • 34min
Ep.195 – Andrew Schwartz on Crowdfunding
Andrew Schwartz, professor of law at the University of Colorado, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss his book Investment Crowdfunding.
This episode is hosted by Andrew Jennings, associate professor of law at Emory University, and was edited by Brynn Radak, a law student at Emory University.

Sep 11, 2023 • 21min
Ep.194 – Lindsey Gallo & Kendall Lynch on Corporate Monitors
Lindsey Gallo, assistant professor of accounting at the University of Michigan, and Kendall Lynch, an accounting PhD candidate at the University of Michigan, join the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss their article Out of Site, Out of Mind? The Role of the Government-Appointed Corporate Monitor. In this article, Gallo, Lynch, and co-author Rimmy Tomy find that post-enforcement corporate monitorships are associated with reductions in law violations during a monitor’s tenure but that those reductions may not persist after the monitorship.
This episode is hosted by Andrew Jennings, associate professor of law at Emory University, and was edited by Brynn Radak, a law student at Emory University.

Sep 5, 2023 • 12min
Ep.193 – Hajin Kim on Stakeholder Expectations
Hajin Kim, assistant professor of law at the University of Chicago, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss her article Expecting Corporate Prosociality, which uses survey experiments to demonstrate a stakeholder-expectations theory for consumer, employment, and investment interactions with corporations.
This episode is hosted by Andrew Jennings, associate professor of law at Emory University.

Aug 22, 2023 • 29min
Ep.192 – Jordan Neyland on Lawyers and IPO Outcomes
Jordan Neyland, assistant professor of law at George Mason University, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss his article Do Lawyers Matter in Initial Public Offerings?, which he co-authored with Thomas Bates of Arizona State University and Jin Roc Lv of Australian National University.
This episode is hosted by Andrew Jennings, associate professor of law at Emory University, and was edited by Warren Zhang.

Aug 18, 2023 • 29min
Ep.191 – Todd Phillips on the MQD at the SEC
Todd Phillips, assistant professor at Georgia State University’s Robinson College of Business, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss his article The Major Questions Doctrine's Domain, which he co-authored with Beau Baumann of Yale University. In this article, Phillips and Baumann explain that the Supreme Court’s novel Major-Questions Doctrine does not apply in cases in which executive agencies bring judicial enforcement actions or seek to apply judicial precedent. In making their case, they use challenges to the Securities and Exchange Commission’s crypto enforcement actions as a case study.

Aug 8, 2023 • 26min
Ep.190 – Helen Norton on Securities Regulation and Free Speech
Helen Norton, professor of law at the University of Colorado, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss her article What 21st-Century Free Speech Law Means for Securities Regulation. In her article Norton examines the deregulatory turn in the Supreme Court's First Amendment jurisprudence and argues that that turn should not affect the longstanding functioning of the nation's securities laws.
This episode is hosted by Andrew Jennings, associate professor of law at Emory University, and was edited by Warren Zhang, a rising second-year law student.

Aug 1, 2023 • 23min
Ep.189 – Rachel Landy on Exit Engineering
Rachel Landy, visiting assistant professor at Cardozo School of Law, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss her article Exit Engineering. In this article Landy extends the existing literature on lawyers-as-transaction-engineers to theorize the role of early-stage startup lawyering on downstream exit events.
This episode is hosted by Andrew Jennings, associate professor of law at Emory University.

Jul 28, 2023 • 19min
Ep.188 – Timothy Pollock on Celebrity CEOs
Timothy Pollock, professor of entrepreneurship at the University of Tennessee Knoxville, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss his article Not Like the Rest of Us? How CEO Celebrity Affects Quarterly Earnings Call Language, which he co-authored with Roberto Ragozzino of Nova School of Business and Economics and Dane Blevins of the University of Central Florida.
This episode is hosted by Andrew Jennings, associate professor of law at Emory University, and was edited by Warren Zhang, a rising second-year law student at Emory University.