Iris Bohnet

Iris Bohnet is a professor and author at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts.[1]

Career

Bohnet is the director of the Women and Public Policy Program,[2][3] Co-chair of the Behavioral Insights Group,[4] and the faculty chair of the executive program, "Global Leadership and Public Policy for the 21st Century" for the World Economic Forum's Young Global Leaders at Harvard Kennedy School.[5] She serves on the board of directors of Credit Suisse Group,[6] as well as on the advisory boards of EDGE and Applied, as well as numerous academic journals. She is a member of the Global Agenda Council on Behavior of the World Economic Forum.[7]

Bohnet has served as the Academic Dean of Harvard Kennedy School[8] as well as on the boards or advisory boards of the Graduate Institute for International and Development Studies, Switzerland, the Vienna University for Business and Economics, Austria, and the University of Lucerne, Switzerland.

Bohnet is the author of What Works: Gender Equality by Design.[9] The book, acclaimed by the Financial Times, the Wall Street Journal, and the Washington Post, among others, offers evidence-based solutions to overcome gender bias in classrooms and boardrooms, in hiring and promotion, benefiting businesses, governments, and society. It has been included in 2016 top book lists by Forbes, the Financial Times, LinkedIn, and the Washington Post.

In 2016, Bohnet has been a featured speaker at Google Book Talks, the LSE, the OECD, SXSW, UNESCO, UNWomen, the World Bank, and the World Economic Forum, among others.

Bohnet's work has been featured in media outlets around the world, including the Atlantic, the BBC, Bloomberg News, the Boston Globe, The Economist, the Financial Times, Forbes, Handelsblatt, the Harvard Business Review, the Huffington Post, NPR, Neue Zürcher Zeitung, the New York Times, PBS, Tages-Anzeiger, Swiss Television, The Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, Wired and WirtschaftsWoche.[10]

Her academic work has been published in the top peer-reviewed journals of her profession, including the American Economic Review, American Political Science Review, the Quarterly Journal of Economics, and Management Science, among about 60 others.[10]

A native of Switzerland (Lucerne),[11] she studied at the chair of Bruno S. Frey[11] (whom she also worked with[12][13][14]) and received her Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Zurich in 1997 and spent a year as a research fellow at the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley from 1997-1998.[10] She joined the Harvard Kennedy School as an assistant professor in 1998 and was made full professor in 2006.[10]

Recent Publications

(for a full list, see here)
  • Bohnet, 2016. What Works: Gender Equality by Design. Belknap Press of Harvard University. Press. ISBN 978-0-674-08903-7
  • Bohnet, van Geen & Bazerman, 2016. When Performance Trumps Gender Bias, Joint Versus Separate Evaluation. Management Science 62 (5), 1225-1234.
  • Bohnet, 2016. (in German) Mit Big Data zum perfekten Team. WirtschaftsWoche, March 22.
  • Bohnet, 2016. Equality Takes Work. The Atlantic, April 12.
  • Bohnet, 2016. How to Take the Bias Out of Job Interviews. Harvard Business Review. April 18.
  • Bohnet, 2016. Interviewing Job Candidates? Try Doing It Blindly. WIRED UK, May 20.

Personal

Bohnet is married and she and her husband, Michael Zürcher, an attorney, have two children, the sons Dominik and Luca.[11][15] She used to compete in synchronized swimming, loves scuba diving and generally, is a water person.

gollark: ... the point is that if the thing which is varying is in the exponent it's "exponential", if the exponent is constant it's "polynomial" or something.
gollark: Exponential would be if it was 2^x or something.
gollark: ... no.
gollark: You are still wrong about it being exponential though, since the "drag equation" is quadratic in velocity.
gollark: It's an approximation for certain cases.

References

  1. "Harvard Kennedy School: Faculty & Staff Directory". Harvard Kennedy School website. Retrieved 20 June 2016.
  2. "Harvard Kennedy School Women and Public Policy Program: Welcome from the Director". Harvard Kennedy School website. Retrieved 20 June 2016.
  3. "Women and Public Policy Program, Harvard Kennedy School". wappp.hks.harvard.edu. Retrieved 2016-06-13.
  4. "Behavioral Insights Group". cpl.hks.harvard.edu. Retrieved 2016-06-13.
  5. "Harvard Kennedy School Executive Education: Faculty". Harvard Kennedy School Executive Education website. Retrieved 20 June 2016.
  6. "Board of Directors of Credit Suisse Group AG". Retrieved 26 January 2014.
  7. "Global Agenda Council on Behaviour". World Economic Forum. Retrieved 2016-06-13.
  8. "HKS appoints Bohnet academic dean". Harvard Gazette. Retrieved 2016-06-20.
  9. "What Works — Iris Bohnet | Harvard University Press". www.hup.harvard.edu. Retrieved 2016-06-13.
  10. "Harvard Kennedy School: Iris Bohnet". Harvard Kennedy School website. Archived from the original on 19 January 2012. Retrieved 10 January 2012.
  11. NZZ December 1, 2016
  12. http://scholar.harvard.edu/files/iris_bohnet/files/cv-ib-june_2016.pdf
  13. http://econweb.ucsd.edu/~jandreon/Econ264/papers/Bohnet%20Frey%20JEBO%201999.pdf
  14. https://www.bsfrey.ch/researchteam.html
  15. http://scholar.harvard.edu/iris_bohnet/biocv

Interview

External audio/video

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