Studierende beim Lernen in der Bibliothek.

Instructors

HSG

a
Veronica Barassi

CaseCast supervision/Online module 1: The Social and Ethical Impacts of Digital Transformations: A Techno-Historical Perspective

Prof. Barassi is anthropologist, and Professor in Media and Communication Studies in the School of Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of St. Gallen, as well as the Chair of Media and Culture in the Institute for Media and Communications Management. She is the author of three books, and her articles have appeared in top-ranked journals. Her most recent research investigated the impact of children’s data traces on their civic rights, and the meaning of a society which ‘datafies’ its citizens from before birth. It featured in international mainstream media such as The GuardianThe Times, The Telegraph, CBC, Business Insider (Italy) and many other outlets. Prof. Barassi has been invited to give talks at leading universities in the U.S. and the U.K. such as Stanford University, University of Southern California, University of California Los Angeles, University of California Irvine, Kings College London and the University of Westminster. In 2018, she submitted her research as evidence to the Information Commissioner’s Office of the UK Government for the development of age appropriate design code, in 2019 the Irish Government invited her to discuss AI Ethics at their Digital Summit, and in 2020 she has been invited as speaker at the Global Child Forum, which is founded by H.M. the King and H.M. the Queen of Sweden. Prof. Barassi Ted Talk on What Tech Companies know about your Children  has reached more than 2 million views.

WU

a
Susann Fiedler

CaseCast supervision

Susann Fiedler, a behavioral scientist, currently heads the Cognition and Behavior Institute at WU Vienna. Prior to this, she led the "Economic Cognition" research group at the Max Planck Institute for Collective Goods. She has been a visiting researcher at Harvard University and a visiting professor at the University of Hagen. Fiedler's research delves into decision-making processes and organizational environments, shedding light on how situations are mentally perceived and how these perceptions evolve. Her research also encompasses motivation, discrimination, cooperation, and the reproducibility of research. Contact

a
Margeret Hall

Online module 2: Managing Information and Technology in Responsible Digital Transformation

Dr. Margeret Hall is an Assistant Professor of Strategic Business Analytics at the WU Vienna. Before this she was an Assistant Professor of IT Innovation University of Nebraska at Omaha and she completed her Postdoc and PhD positions at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology. Her contributions broadly focus on computationally mediated participation, seeking to understand how vulnerable individuals are influenced by malicious online content, for instance, success factors in phishing or misinformation campaigns. This research is a novel combination of applied machine learning, cyberpsychology, and theories and techniques from online communities research. Prior to starting her PhD, she worked at the United Nations Office in Geneva and at the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in Audit and Legal Affairs, and at Bayer Business Services in Training and Process Management. She completed her Bachelors and Masters degrees in Policy studies in the United States, Germany, Lebanon, and Switzerland.

Hitotsubashi University

a
Yoshinori Fujikawa

CaseCast supervision/Online module 3: Changing Lenses: Value Creation and Value Capture in the Post-digital Future

Yoshinori (Yoshi) Fujikawa is Associate Professor and Faculty in Charge of External Affairs at Hitotsubashi University Business School’s School of International Corporate Strategy (Hitotsubashi ICS) and serves a number of government committees and professional institutions. Prior to joining ICS in 2003, he was Lecturer and Research Assistant at Pennsylvania State University. He also worked as Research Associate at the Mind of Market Laboratory and the Division of Research, both at Harvard Business School. His business experience includes marketing research and strategic consulting work with Olson Zaltman Associates.

At Hitotsubashi ICS, Yoshi led the school’s MBA Program as the faculty director for 15 years (2006-2020) and helped bring the program to the “#1 in Japan” rank (QS Global MBA Ranking 2019 and 2022). He also served as Associate Vice President for International Affairs at Hitotsubashi University (2018-2020).

Yoshi received his BA in Economics and MA in Commerce from Hitotsubashi University; his MBA from Harvard Business School; and his PhD in Marketing from Pennsylvania State University.

UPD

a
Anaïs Boutru-Creveuil

CaseCast supervision

Anaïs Boutru-Creveuil is an Assistant Professor of Strategic Management at Dauphine PSL (Paris, France). Previously to her academic career, she was a practitioner in the retail sector (Amazon, Carrefour). Her research interests focus on the legitimization and acceptability of organizational transformations. Her teachings deal with strategic management processes and practices.

Contact: anaïs.boutru@dauphine.psl.eu

a
Pierre Laniray

CaseCast supervision/Online module 4: What do Information Technologies do to Organizations?

Pierre Laniray is an Assistant Professor of Management & Organization Studies at Dauphine PSL (Paris, France). His research interest include the digitalisation of work and its influence on the construction, consolidation and evolution of professional identities. He is a member of the Research Group on Collaborative Spaces (RGCS) focused on collaborative communities and collaborative movements involved in new work practices (i.e. slashers, nomadic workers, teleworkers, entrepreneurs, …). His teachings deal with the digital transformation of work, as well as new business models in the "age of digital platforms".

ESADE

a
Miguel Saiz García

CaseCast supervision

Miguel Saiz is an Industrial Engineer from the University of Navarra (Tecnun) and MBA from ESADE. He is also certified as PMP®, (Project Management Professional) from the Project Management Institute, PMI® (USA). Since 2001 he has been working in the automotive sector in companies such as Grupo Antolín, Bosch, Doga and Lear Corporation. During his professional career he has led the development of products for brands such as Ford, Chrysler, Honda, GM, Audi, VW and Seat. In addition, he collaborates in the Internet Computing & Systems Optimization research group in the Universitat Oberta de Catalunya (UOC). He is founder of weOptimize (Microsoft Partner) and Teaching Fellow at Esade, Department of Operations, Innovation and Data Sciences.

Contact: miguel.saiz@esade.edu

a
David Murillo

Online module 5: Ethical data-driven business models

David Murillo holds a PhD in Sociology by the University of Barcelona. BA in Humanities, and BS in Business Administration. Prior to joining ESADE, he has worked in the financial, public and non-for-profit sectors. Currently Associate Professor of the Department of Society, Politics and Sustainability at ESADE Business School, Ramon Llull University, he conducts research for the Institute for Social Innovation of the same school in areas like digital social innovation, business ethics and critical management studies. He has been visiting scholar or guest lecturer at different universities or business schools like Stanford (USA); Frankfurt School of Finance and Management (Germany), Copenhagen Business School (DK), ESAN and Pacifico University (Peru) or Sogang Business School (Korea).

Contact: david.murillo@esade.edu

a
Obaid Amjad

Online module 5: Ethical data-driven business models

Obaid Amjad is a PhD candidate in Management Science at the Esade Business School. He holds a Master of Research in Management Sciences from the Esade School of Business, and a Bachelor of Business Administration from the Schulich School of Business at York University. Prior to pursuing his academic career, Obaid worked as a Strategy Consultant at IBM Canada. His research interests relate to investigating the political economy of the digital sphere and the data extractivism of digital platforms. More specifically, he investigates alternative organizing and power relations associated with datafication and digital transformations, data activism and data protection regulations. He has presented multiple works of his at various conferences such as Academy of Management (AoM), European Group for Organization Studies (EGOS), International Association for Business and Society (IABS), Society for Business Ethics (SBE) and Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics (SASE).

Contact: obaid.amjad@esade.edu

SMU

a
Jason Grant Allen

CaseCast supervision

Dr Jason Grant Allen is Associate Professor of Law at SMU Yong Pung How School of Law and Director of the SMU Centre for AI & Data Governance. Jason read law in Australia, Germany, and the United Kingdom. His work on various aspects of law and digital technology has been published in leading journals. Jason has provided thought leadership to national and international organisations and he is a working group member of the UNIDROIT project on the private law applicable to digital assets.

SMU

a
Mark Findlay

Online module 6: Living Digital Transformation

Professor Mark Findlay is a Professor of Law at Singapore Management University. In addition, he has honorary professorial visitorships/fellowships in the law schools at the Australian National University, the University of Edinburgh, York University, and the University of New South Wales, as well as being an Honorary Senior Research Fellow at the British Institute for International and Comparative Law.  Professor Findlay is the author of 29 monographs and collections and over 150 refereed articles and book chapters.  He has held Chairs in Australia, Hong Kong, Singapore, England, and Ireland.  For over 20 years he was at the University of Sydney as the Chair in Criminal Justice, the Director of the Institute of Criminology.  Most recent publications include: ‘Globalisation, Populism, Pandemics and the Law: Anarchy and the ecstasy’,  ‘Law’s Regulatory Relevance’ and ‘Principled International Criminal Justice: Lessons from tort law’.

Currently he is working on COVID-19 regulatory issues , trust in AI regulation and governance, smart cities and surveillance/mass data sharing, and law and change.