Mark de Rond
Mark de Rond is Professor of Organizational Ethnography at Cambridge University (Judge Business School). He studies people by living with them under similar conditions so as to better understand how they experience, and develop meaningful relations to the world around them. His fieldwork has included stints with war surgeons in Afghanistan, elite rowers in Cambridge, biochemists in Oxford, comedians in London and Edinburgh, and peace activists on a protest march from Berlin to Aleppo. It also includes an effort to row the length of the Amazon River so as to learn, first-hand, how collaboration unfolds and how problems are solved under trying conditions.His book ''Strategic Alliances as Social Facts: Business, Biotechnology & Intellectual History'' received the 2005 George R Terry Book Award from the Academy of Management, awarded annually to the book judged to have made the most significant contribution to advancing management knowledge. His subsequent book ''The Last Amateurs'' was selected by ''The Financial Times'' as one of 12 Best Business Books of 2008, and by BBC Sport as one of 10 Best Sporting Reads of 2008. His portfolio of work was awarded the 2009 Imagination Lab Award, given to one academic each year for scholarship that is both innovative and rigorous, and the 2016 Sandra Dawson Research Impact Award. His most recent book, “''Doctors at War''”, was awarded the 2018 EGOS Best Book Award, and was a finalist for the 2018 George R Terry Award and 2018 Outstanding Qualitative Book Award. An article based on this fieldwork received the 2016 Best Article Award from the Academy of Management Journal.
His research has featured widely in the press, including in ''The Economist'', ''TIME magazine'', ''Forbes'', ''The Financial Times'', ''The Times'', ''The Sunday Times'', ''The Guardian'', ''The Week'', ''Der Spiegel'', ''The Los Angeles Times'', ''CNN'',''Newsweek'', ''The Wall Street Journal'', and on the BBC. His photographs have been published in ''The Independent'', ''The Daily Mail'', ''The Daily Telegraph'' and on the BBC News.
In 2011 de Rond embedded with a team of surgeons in Camp Bastion, Afghanistan, to understand how they collaborate, organize and think about their work. As an extension of his research into teaming in difficult environments, de Rond and a Cambridge colleague completed the first unsupported row of the entire length of the River Amazon, securing a Guinness World Record in the process. In 2017, he spent time with peace activists on a walk from Berlin to Aleppo (Civil March for Aleppo) and, for the past four years, has embedded himself with one of Britain's most active paedophile hunting teams. All of his work is tied together by an interest in how people live challenging circumstances on their own terms, in the explanations they give for why things are as they are, and in the compromises they make with life and those around them. Provided by Wikipedia
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