David A. Whetten

David Allred Whetten (born June 22, 1946) is an American organizational theorist and Professor of Organizational Leadership and Strategy at the Marriott School of Management at the Brigham Young University. He is known for his work on organizational identity[1] research methodology,[2] and organizational effectiveness.[3]

Biography

Whetten obtained his BS in Sociology in 1970 at Brigham Young University, where he in 1971 also obtained his MS in sociology. In 1974 he obtained his PhD in Organizational Behavior at Cornell University.[4]

Whetten started hais career as New York State Area Analyst at the National Planning Association in Washington, D.C. in 1971. After his graduation in 1974 he started his academic career at the University of Illinois as Assistant Professor in Business Administration. He became Associate Professor in Business Administration in 1980, and Professor in Business Administration from 1983 to 1994. From 1991 to 1991 he was also Commerce Alumni Professor of Business Administration, and from 1991 to 1994 Harry J. Gray Professor of Executive Leadership. Since 1994 he is Jack Wheatley Professor of Organizational Behavior at Brigham Young University.[4]

From 1991 to 1994 Whetten was also Director of the Office of Organizational Research at the University of Illinois. After moving to the Brigham Young he was Director of its Center for the Study of Values in Organizations until 1998, and Director of its Faculty Center since 1998.[4]

Whetten was elected Academy of Management Fellow in 1991. The Academy of Management awarded him the Distinguished Service Award in 1994, and the Distinguished Scholar Award, Organization and Management Theory Division in 2002, and he served as its president.[4]

Selected publications

  • Cameron, Kim S., and David A. Whetten, eds. Organizational effectiveness: A comparison of multiple models. Academic Press, 2013.
  • David Alfred Whetten. Developing management skills

Articles, a selection:

gollark: Doesn't work *how*?
gollark: I disagree, though. Calling your thing `libbees` makes it seem like *the* one canonical library for bees, even if there is a better one available.
gollark: Yes, apparently they do go for that somewhat based on `pacman -Ss lib`.
gollark: Hmm, fascinating, these © libraries appear to be named *very* generically.
gollark: Because low-level language libraries always have reasonable names, don't they.

References

  1. Ashforth, Blake E., and Fred Mael. "Social identity theory and the organization." Academy of management review 14.1 (1989): 20-39.
  2. Crossan, Mary M., Henry W. Lane, and Roderick E. White. "An organizational learning framework: From intuition to institution." Academy of management review 24.3 (1999): 522-537.
  3. Rainey, Hal G. Understanding and managing public organizations. John Wiley & Sons, 2009.
  4. DAVID ALLRED WHETTEN CV Archived 2015-02-03 at the Wayback Machine at ba.nccu.edu.tw. Accessed 03.02.2015
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