Across disciplines, UCLA Anderson’s faculty enhance the school’s relevance through cutting-edge research that is highly applicable to the economy, business and the wider world. The weekly UCLA Anderson Review chronicles for a broader audience the research our faculty publish in leading academic journals.
UCLA Anderson Review launched with articles examining retirement savings, including Americans’ aversion to annuities and the hot topic of decumulation — illustrating how, under a single roof at Anderson, faculty members are individually and collectively expanding understanding of how to solve one of the country’s biggest financial and societal problems.
The Review joins other leading graduate business school publications in making available to a global audience of business leaders, fellow academic researchers, policymakers and others the substantial intellectual capital UCLA Anderson possesses and adds to each day.
“A key priority for all of us at Anderson is to showcase the impact of our faculty’s wide-ranging research, and make it accessible to students, alumni, business professionals, the media and others,” said Dean Judy Olian when the Review launched last fall. “We are pleased to share the inaugural edition of the UCLA Anderson Review, offering important and practical insights derived from the rigorous scholarship of our faculty.”
The Review highlights how UCLA Anderson faculty are making a difference in how we see mortgage markets, the cost of health care, investor behavior, workplace dynamics, noncompete agreements, household energy conservation and even our own pursuit of happiness. Readers will be surprised by unconventional subjects like a study that turns romanticized views of French history upside down and a close examination of leadership dynamics through the lens of a failed 1848 revolt.
Read the latest issue of UCLA Anderson Review to find out how antitrust thinking on hospital mergers has been forced to evolve and why some people would rather be a small fish in a big pond when it comes to relative income.
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