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Poverty, vulnerability, and the role of responsible management education in a post-COVID world

Geri Mason (Seattle Pacific University School of Business and Economics, Seattle, Washington, USA)
Al Rosenbloom (Brennan School of Business, Dominican University, River Forest, Illinois, USA)

Journal of Global Responsibility

ISSN: 2041-2568

Article publication date: 25 June 2021

Issue publication date: 13 January 2022

605

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to discuss the consequences for responsible management education and learning (RMEL) as an enduring feature of the post-COVID-19 world: increased inequality and increased vulnerable individuals living in poverty. Because of this, responsible management education and learning (RMEL) must integrate poverty as a threshold concept on which students’ cognitive frame is built.

Design/methodology/approach

This paper advocates for poverty to be taught as a multidimensional threshold concept that encompasses a person’s freedoms and capabilities, in addition to their income (Sen, 1999). Further, this paper provides a framework for integration into all curricula grounded in RMEL’s unique domain of inquiry and study: the integration of ethics, responsibility and sustainability.

Findings

Threshold concepts transform student learning in durable, immutable ways. When poverty is taught as such, students develop more elaborate poverty cognitive frames that they can apply across their entire course of study. This paper describes how to: (1) reframe poverty as a threshold concept; (2) apply Biggs’ (2003) framework of constructive alignment to assure the integrity of course learning objectives and the curriculum; (3) create poverty-related assignments that are emotionally engaging and relevant for students (Dart, 2008); and (4) use this proposed framework of including poverty in business classes.

Research limitations/implications

Without an integrated multidimensional understanding of poverty, students will not emerge as managers competent in addressing these critical issues from within a business context (Grimm,2020). It will be imperative in future research to evaluate the outcomes of doing so and to determine whether this solution creates responsible managers more competent in addressing poverty-rooted issues.

Originality/value

This paper brings together two elements of student learning central to understanding poverty: threshold concepts and cognitive frames. This paper also uses Biggs’ (2003) constructive alignment framework to assure that curricular and course changes have both internal coherence and explicit learning outcomes.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank the two anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments.

Funding: The author(s) received no financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.

Citation

Mason, G. and Rosenbloom, A. (2022), "Poverty, vulnerability, and the role of responsible management education in a post-COVID world", Journal of Global Responsibility, Vol. 13 No. 1, pp. 72-86. https://doi.org/10.1108/JGR-01-2021-0004

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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