Paul Shrivastava

Paul Shrivastava
Born (1951-08-14)August 14, 1951
Bhopal, India
Residence State College, Pennsylvania
Fields Sustainability
Organizational Strategy
Crisis Management
Institutions New York University
Bucknell University
Concordia University
Future Earth
Alma mater IIM Calcutta
Known for Art and Sustainable Enterprise
Crisis Management

Paul Shrivastava is Chief Sustainability Officer and Director of the Sustainability Institute, at The Pennsylvania State University. Previously he was the Executive Director of Future Earth, an international sustainability research programme. Before that, he was Distinguished Professor and Director of the David O'Brien Centre for Sustainable Enterprise at Concordia University.

Early life and education

Paul Shrivastava was born in Bhopal, India, in 1951. He received a Bachelor's degree in Mechanical Engineering from the Maulana Azad National Institute of Technology, Bhopal, a Post Graduate Diploma in Management (MBA) from the Indian Institute of Management Calcutta and a Ph.D. from the University of Pittsburgh.

Academic career

Shrivastava held the Howard I. Scott Chair in Management, a distinguished professorship at Bucknell University, and was Associate Professor of Management at the Stern School of Business, New York University. He was awarded a Fulbright Program Senior Scholar award to study Japanese corporate environmental management at Kyoto University, Japan. He has also taught at the Helsinki School of Economics, and IIM Shillong. He is the author of Bhopal: Anatomy of a Crisis (1989), a book that launched the field of organizational crisis management.[1] He founded the Organizations and Natural Environment Division of the Academy of Management (the world's largest academic professional association in Management studies).[2]

He was Distinguished Professor and Director of the David O'Brien Centre for Sustainable Enterprise at Concordia University, Montreal.

In February 2015 Shrivastava was appointed Executive Director of Future Earth, an international research programme for sustainability and global environmental change. He also holds the International Research Chair in Art and Sustainable Enterprise at ICN Business School, Nancy, France. In these roles he combines scientific and artistic approaches to sustainable development, exemplified in the conference Balance unBalance 2011,[3] and his book Learning from the Financial Crisis (edited with Matt Statler) published by Stanford University Press [4] He has published 17 books and over 100 articles.[5]

He has served on the Editorial Boards of several leading management studies journals, on the Board of Trustees of DeSales University, on the Board of the Finance and Sustainability Initiative, Montreal,[6] and as Senior Advisor to the Indian Institute of Management Shillong.

Research emphases

Paul Shrivastava's major contributions to the field of business management are concepts for understanding strategic industrial and environmental crises and crisis management, corporate strategies for sustainability and sustainable strategic management. His contributions to management practice include crisis management techniques, environmental and sustainability strategies, and use of the arts for creativity and sustainability programs.

Shrivastava's professional work is rooted in a concern for human-technology-nature relationships. Having grown up in the small town of Bhopal in Madhya Pradesh, the most backward state of India, he was enchanted by the promise of technology to improve the lives of people. He studied engineering in college and graduated first (gold medal) in his mechanical engineering class. He received a Post Graduate Diploma in Management at IIM Calcutta and Ph.D. from University of Pittsburgh. The Bhopal disaster (the worst industrial accident in history) revealed the two-headedness of technology, and he turned to examining the risks and crises associated with industrial technologies, leading to systematic studies of crisis management. The field of crisis management has emerged since then as a vital field of study. It is concerned with identifying systemic causes and consequences of crises. It has led to development of crisis management and crisis prevention practices in the areas of industrial disasters, computer disasters, risk management, worker safety, metals mining and oil industries.[7]

He developed "embodied learning" methods wherein concepts are intertwined with physically and emotionally engaging activities to create learning experiences that endure and transform.[8] His course "Managing with Passion" is an events management course in which students learn by planning, organizing, training for and participating in a real event – a USA Triathlon sanctioned public triathlon race. Students gain understanding of concepts that are interwoven with physical activities, emotional activities, cognitive exercises and online activities.[9]

An element in Shrivastava's professional work is the creation of new organizations. In 1976, along with six entrepreneurs from Microcomp Pvt. Ltd., and eSocrates, Inc., he helped launch the HCL Enterprise group of computer companies. He has also created academic organizations such as the ONE Division of the Academy of Management, the David O'Brien Centre for Sustainable Enterprise, the World Business School Council for Sustainable Business[10] and non-profit organizations (Industrial Crisis Institute). He has co-founded two academic journals: Industrial Crisis Quarterly published by Elsevier, and Organization & Environment published by Sage Publications. He is steering WBSCSB in collaboration with UN-Principles of Responsible Management Education (PRME) and Global Responsible Leadership Initiative, to create a report on the Next 50 Years of Management Education to be presented at Rio+20 Conference in May 2012.[11]

Paul Shrivastava has been studying corporate sustainability for the past two decades. Despite the scientific understanding of global climate change, global poverty, and biodiversity decline, global leaders[12] are unable to reach effective international agreements to address these challenges. He suggests that science alone will not solve the problem of sustainability. Humans have to find a new way of engaging nature, that allows them to care and preserve it in enduring ways. Shrivastava is extending the scientific understanding of sustainability to the realm of the arts, which as the repository of human emotions offer a vehicle for creating passionate engagement between humans and nature.[13] This project uses transdisciplinary approaches to science and arts in aesthetic inquiry into sustainability issues. This collaboration of a dozen researchers in France, Canada, USA and India, has produced results including the Balance unBalance 2011 conference [14] and Montreal Degrowth 2012 conference.[15]

His work has been featured in the The Los Angeles Times, The Philadelphia Inquirer],[16] The Christian Science Monitor, The Globe and Mail, and The Montreal Gazette, and on the MacNeil-Lehrer News Hour

Publications

Partial List of Publications:

http://publichealthreviews.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s40985-016-0039-y

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0040162516307119#af0005


References

  1. http://www.jstor.org/pss/258581
  2. "Home". One.aomonline.org. 2012-08-06. Retrieved 2012-12-03.
  3. Edited by Paul Shrivastava and Matt Statler. "Learning from the Global Financial Crisis". Sup.org. Retrieved 2012-12-03.
  4. "Meet Director Shrivastava". Johnmolson.concordia.ca. Retrieved 2012-12-03.
  5. "Summary of FSI, what it is, why it has been established?". Ifd-fsi.org. Retrieved 2012-12-03.
  6. http://paulshrivastava.com/Research%20Publications%20Directory%5CA%20Native%20Son%20Returns%20to%20Bhopal%20.pdf
  7. http://paulshrivastava.net/Research%20Publications%20Directory/Pedagogy%20of%20Passion%20for%20Sustainability.pdf
  8. Morrison, James L. (2000-11-20). "The Technology Source Archives - Online Communities as a New Learning Paradigm: An Interview with Paul Shrivastava". Technologysource.org. Retrieved 2012-12-03.
  9. "World Business School Council for Sustainable Business". Wbscsb.com. Retrieved 2012-12-03.
  10. "50+20 Home : 50+20". 50plus20.org. 2012-06-15. Retrieved 2012-12-03.
  11. "Climate change "off the G20 agenda" as Australia prepares to abolish carbon price". https://www.theguardian.com/. Retrieved 2015-08-25. External link in |publisher= (help)
  12. "RCI // Eco-efficiency - A path to profitability". Rcinet.ca. Retrieved 2012-12-03.
  13. "ABOUT". Balance-unbalance2011.hexagram.ca. 2011-05-19. Retrieved 2012-12-03.
  14. "International Conference on Degrowth in the Americas". Montreal.degrowth.org. Retrieved 2012-12-03.
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