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This session seeks papers that aim not to describe poverty and underdevelopment, but to solve them. We welcome all approaches and are open to a wide range of definitions of “poverty” and “underdevelopment.” We hope to identify and nurture sociological approaches to solving global poverty.
Ambiguous Worthiness and Reward Dissonance: Sociomotivational logic from the Protestant Ethic to high-performing African officials - Erin Metz McDonnell, University of Notre Dame
Between Scarcity and Virtue: How Collective Memory Shapes Organizational Capacity for Sufficiency Ethics - Saheli Nath, University of Central Oklahoma
From Ephemeral to Enduring: A Triple Mechanism Framework for CSR Persistence - Peng Lu, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences; Fan Fu, University of California-San Diego
Magic Potion or Mirage? Paradoxical Institutional Logics in China's Contemporary Poverty Governance - Yuanhang Zhu, Yale University; Zikun Liu
The Professionalization-Development Paradox: How Family Firms in Bangladesh Hire Professional CEOs? - Priyam Saraf, Stanford University