Kevin J. Dooley

Kevin John Dooley (born ca 1961) is an American scholar, and Professor of Supply Chain Management at the W. P. Carey School of Business at Arizona State University.

Biography

Dooley studied at the University of Illinois, where he received his BS in Industrial Engineering in 1982, his MS in Industrial Engineering in 1984, and his PhD in Mechanical Engineering in 1987 for the thesis "A fault classification system for quality and productivity improvements in continuous processes" under supervision of Shiv G. Kapoor.[1]

Dooley started his academic career at the University of Minnesota in 1992 as Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering. From 1992 to 1997 he was Assistant Professor, and from 1993 to 1997 also Director of the Industrial Engineering Program. In 1997 he was Professor of Management and Professor of Industrial Engineering at Arizona State University and since 2003 he is Professor of Supply Chain Management. At Arizona State University he is also Chief Research Officer at The Sustainability Consortium since 2008, and Senior Sustainability Scientist at the School of Sustainability since 2010.

Dooley is member of the editorial board of the Decision Sciences journal, and the Journal of Operations Management. Dooley's research interests are in the field of the "application of complexity science to help organizations improve."[2]

Publications

Selected books

  • Marshall Scott Poole, Andrew H. Van de Ven, and Kevin Dooley, (2000) Organizational Change and Innovation Processes: Theory and Methods for Research. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Baumann, W., Fristch, J., and K. Dooley (2007). Network Maturity Model: An Integrated Process Framework for Computer Network Management. Parket, CO: Outskirts Press.

Selected articles

gollark: Well, sure?
gollark: I mean, yes, but:- I don't think there are that many blank templates around- There's no way to tell where the text should go- It would make bad memes
gollark: But not finding new interesting templates.
gollark: I mean, generating vaguely memelike text and putting it on a meme template is doable.
gollark: "AI" is not as far as I am aware actually good enough to make memes yet.

References

  1. Kevin J. Dooley - VITA at public.asu.edu. Accessed, November 11, 2013.
  2. Kevin Dooley, Senior Sustainability Scientist, Global Institute of Sustainability at schoolofsustainability.asu.edu, 2013.
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