Skip to main content
Photo of Katie Badura

Scheller Lunchtime Live: "I Can Get Away with Anything": A Conversation About Impunity in the Workplace, Featuring Katie Badura

Details

October 7, 2022

Type

Special Event

Areas

Undergraduate
Full-time MBA
Evening MBA
Executive MBA
PhD

Format

Online

Scheller Lunchtime Live is a livestream series hosted by the Georgia Tech Scheller College of Business featuring faculty, student, and alumni speakers discussing relevant topics for the tech-driven, digital age. 

Impunity, or the belief that one can escape punishment for misconduct, is an increasingly pervasive phenomena in the workplace. Join Katie Badura, Assistant Professor of Organizational Behavior at the Georgia Tech Scheller College of Business, as she discusses where a sense of impunity comes from, the implications it has for the workplace, and how you can best avoid its pitfalls as an employee and manager.

Just hit "Attend" on this LinkedIn event and refresh this page on Friday, October 7 at 12:00 p.m. ET to access the session. Please note, you must have a LinkedIn profile to register and view the livestream.

About Katie Badura

 Katie Badura is an Assistant Professor of Organizational Behavior in the Scheller College of Business at Georgia Tech. She received her Ph.D. in Organization and Human Resources Management from the State University of New York at Buffalo.

Her research includes two primary lines of inquiry: leadership emergence and personality. In particular, she investigates the process through which individuals emerge as leaders within organizations and how personality impacts employee, team, and firm-level outcomes. She is also interested in understanding the role that surface-level individual differences (e.g., gender) have in the workplace. Her work has been featured in top academic outlets including the Academy of Management Journal, the Journal of Applied Psychology, and Personnel Psychology.

Join us on Friday, October 7 at noon for our Scheller Lunchtime Live event to hear Katie Badura, Assistant Professor of Organizational Behavior at the Georgia Tech Scheller College of Business discuss where a sense of impunity comes from in the workplace, the implications it has, and how you can best avoid its pitfalls as an employee and manager.

This website uses cookies. For more information review our Cookie Policy

Source