Abstract

COVID-19 is the most immediate of several crises we face as human beings: crises that expose deeply-rooted matters of social injustice in our societies. Management scholars have not been encouraged to address the role that business, as we conduct it and consider it as scholars, has played in creating the crises and fostering the injustices our crises are laying bare. Contributors to this article draw attention to the way that the pandemic has highlighted long-standing examples of injustice, from inequality to racism, gender, and social discrimination through environmental injustice to migratory workers and modern slaves. They consider the fact that few management scholars have raised their voices in protest, at least partly because of the ideological underpinnings of the discipline, and the fact these need to be challenged.

Cite as

Peredo, A., Abdelnour, S., Adler, P., Banerjee, B., Bapuji, H., Calas, M., Chertkovskaya, E., Colbourne, R., Contu, A., Crane, A., Evans, M., Hirsch, P., E Osorio, A., Ozkazanc-Pan, B., Smircich, L. & Weber, G. 2022, 'We are boiling: Management scholars speaking out on COVID-19 and social justice', Journal of Management Inquiry, 31(4), pp. 339-357. https://doi.org/10.1177/10564926221103480

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Last updated: 20 October 2022
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