New Ideas
for a Changing World
Some of the greatest intellectual challenges of our time are emerging from the broad fields of business and management. HBS Doctoral Programs reflect the changing world of business, society, and education.
“What I've enjoyed most about our collaboration is talking about the ideas and planning the possibilities, and then watching how incredibly fast Melissa turns ideas and possibilities into action.”
—Professor Amy Edmondson
“The HBS and Harvard economics professors I talked to during my graduate school search were excited about many of the same questions I hoped to study.”
—Michael Dickstein,
Business Economics, PHD 2011
“One of the joys of being a faculty member in the doctoral program in organizational behavior is the chance to work with students like Sujin.”
—J. Richard Hackman,
Harvard University Department of Psychology
“I love the freedom to explore my own curiosity and let it lead my day and schedule.”
—Hila Lifshitz, Management
“All of the professors I have worked with here are exemplary researchers—best at their art in researching and publishing—yet humble and open to mentoring.”
—Joseph Davies-Gavin, Marketing
“I will always feel a part of the HBS community. I feel very close to my fellow alumni as well as to the faculty within my department.”
— Claudine Madras Gartenberg, Strategy, DBA 2011
Highlights
Judd Kessler (PhD BE 2011) named one of Forbes Magazine's "30 Under 30"
Kessler, an Assistant Professor at the Wharton School, is featured as someone under 30 years old who is making his mark in the world of law and policy.
Ethan Bernstein's (DBA, MG) research on CEOs and bankrupt companies highlighted on MSNBC
Bernstein's article in the Stanford Journal of Law, Business, and Finance, "All's Fair in Love, War, and Bankruptcy," is discussed by Martha C. White on MSNBC's The Bottom Line