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- Title
What Does Not Kill You (Sometimes) Makes You Stronger: Productivity Fluctuations of Journal Editors.
- Authors
AGUINIS, HERMAN; DE BRUIN, GIDEON P.; CUNNINGHAM, DANIELLE; HALL, NICOLE L.; CULPEPPER, STEVEN A.; GOTTFREDSON, RYAN K.
- Abstract
We tested competing hypotheses, based on learning and job burnout theories as well as autobiographical case studies, regarding the careerwide research productivity of 58 past editors of six journals over a 50-year period (i.e., approximately mid-1950s to mid-2000s). Our study included editors of Academy of Management Journal, Academy of Management Review, Administrative Science Quarterly, Journal of Applied Psychology, Journal of Management, and Personnel Psychology. Results indicate important fluctuations in the research productivity of editors such that, on average, their research output peaks during their editorship period, and it decreases sharply immediately after the editorship term. Although there is a productivity recovery period, it subsequently takes at least a full decade for the editors' research productivity to reach their pre-editorship level. We discuss implications for aspiring editors as well as the field.
- Subjects
PERIODICAL editors; PRODUCTIVITY accounting; PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout; ROLE conflict; NONFORMAL education; JOB descriptions
- Publication
Academy of Management Learning & Education, 2010, Vol 9, Issue 4, p683
- ISSN
1537-260X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.5465/amle.9.4.zqr683