In financial services, managers as a predictor of fraud
A new study of financial advisors finds that middle managers are crucial to understanding the prevalence of misconduct.
A new study of financial advisors finds that middle managers are crucial to understanding the prevalence of misconduct.
In areas where Uber operates, car owners saw fewer unemployment claims and credit delinquencies from 2012 to 2016.
A new approach analyzed resumes for a Fortune 500 firm — and bested traditional screening practices.
A new study suggests that a universal basic income provided stability to impoverished Kenyans in bad times. Could UBI work elsewhere?
“Fake news” and misinformation peak online during presidential election years. Experts look at how they spread and what can be done to stop them.
Data science is exploding, but women hold just a quarter of jobs. Four women discuss career paths, mentorship, and the benefits of diverse views.
Ensuring Black lives matter in the workplace requires perspective taking, thoughtful leadership, and structural and symbolic changes within a company.
What voters read and retain varies by age, gender, race, and socioeconomic status — which in turn can influence politicians and policy.
Ed Golding advocated for fair housing at the Federal Housing Authority and Freddie Mac. His legacy: Decades of housing finance reform.
The Indiana Department of Child Services used job simulations to cut staff turnover by 31% and lay the foundation for a data-centric transformation.