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Sandy E. Green

Researcher at California State University, Northridge

Publications -  24
Citations -  1748

Sandy E. Green is an academic researcher from California State University, Northridge. The author has contributed to research in topics: Rhetorical question & Rhetoric. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 24 publications receiving 1326 citations. Previous affiliations of Sandy E. Green include California State University & University of Southern California.

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A Meta-analytic Review of Ethical Leadership Outcomes and Moderators

TL;DR: This article used social learning and social exchange theories to test the relationship between ethical leadership and follower work outcomes, and found that ethical leadership is related positively to numerous follower outcomes such as perceptions of leader interactional fairness and follower ethical behavior.
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Blockchain as a disruptive technology for business: A systematic review

TL;DR: It is found that blockchain remains an early-stage domain of research in terms of theoretical grounding, methodological diversity, and empirically grounded work in the business literature from 2014 to 2018.
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Suspended in Self-Spun Webs of Significance: A Rhetorical Model of Institutionalization and Institutionally Embedded Agency

TL;DR: The authors employ rhetorical theory to reconceptualize institutionalization as change in argument structure, and use it to define the structure of argument used by a state to achieve change in its own argument structure.
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Corporate Governance in the Context of Crises: Towards a Stakeholder Theory of Crisis Management

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors take a step towards developing a stakeholder theory of crisis management and argue that adopting the principles of a stake-holder model of corporate governance will lead companies to engage more frequently in proactive and/or accommodating crisis management behavior even if these crisis management behaviours are not perceived to maximize shareholder value.
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Rhetorical Institutionalism: Language, Agency, and Structure in Institutional Theory since Alvesson 1993

TL;DR: In this paper, a rhetorical model of institutionalism is proposed to explain how institutions both constrain and enable agency in an ambiguous and thus rhetorical world, where knowledge operated as an institutionalized myth and rationality surrogate.