Revise and Resubmit - The Mayukh Show

Kinship Interlocks (O’Brien, 2026) | FT50 ASR

1 h 37 min · 17 mei 2026
aflevering Kinship Interlocks (O’Brien, 2026) | FT50 ASR artwork

Beschrijving

English Podcast Starts at 00:00:00 Bengali Podcast Starts at 00:41:56 Hindi Podcast Starts at 00:56:22 Danish Podcast Starts at 01:20:39 Reference O’Brien, S. (2026). Kinship Interlocks: How the Intimate Exchange of Wealth, Status, and Power Generates Upper-Class Persistence. American Sociological Review. https://doi.org/10.1177/00031224261425688 ‌Youtube Channel ⁠https://www.youtube.com/@weekendresearcher⁠ Podcast Website https://mayukhmukhopadhyay.com/reviseandresubmit 🎙️✨ Welcome to Revise and Resubmit. Sometimes a research paper does more than explain the world. Sometimes it lifts a corner of the fabric and shows us the hidden stitching, the quiet arrangements by which power survives itself. Today, I want to sit with one of those papers. 📚👀 This episode turns to Kinship Interlocks: How the Intimate Exchange of Wealth, Status, and Power Generates Upper-Class Persistence by Shay O’Brien, published online on 25 March 2026 in the American Sociological Review, a prestigious FT50 journal published by SAGE Publications. That matters because the venue signals serious scholarship. But the paper’s real force comes from its question: how do some families remain on top for generations while others do not? 🏛️💼👑 What makes this paper so striking is that the answer is not money alone. Wealth matters, yes, but O’Brien asks us to see something more intimate and more unsettling. Families at the top endure because they braid wealth, status, and power through kinship itself. Through marriage, obligation, protection, and the soft invisible traffic of advantage, they create what the paper calls kinship interlocks. 🧬🔗 It is a powerful phrase because it captures a hard truth. The upper class is not just a collection of successful individuals. It is a networked inheritance machine. It protects its own from risk, cushions them from failure, and gives them lifts that can look from the outside like merit or luck, when often it is family structure quietly doing the work behind closed doors. 🚪✨ And the paper does not let us look away from the social conditions of that durability. These arrangements are shaped by race, gender, and sexuality, by the deep cultural rules that decide who counts as proper family and who does not. So upper-class persistence is not only an economic story. It is a moral and political one. It is about who gets protected, who gets promoted, and who gets written into continuity itself. 🧠⚖️ Using a remarkable mixed-methods dataset spanning 122 years of elite life in Dallas, Texas, O’Brien shows that elite persistence is not accidental. It is collaborative, organized, and intimate. A class project carried across generations in the language of loyalty and family, but with consequences far beyond the family tree. 🌳📊 I love papers like this because they make abstraction feel personal, and the personal feel structural. They remind me that sociology, at its best, does not just name inequality. It shows us how inequality learns to reproduce itself with elegance, patience, and devastating efficiency. My sincere thanks to Shay O’Brien for this extraordinary work, and to SAGE Publications for publishing it in the American Sociological Review, one of the most prestigious journals on the FT50 list. 🙏📖 If this kind of research conversation speaks to you, please subscribe to Revise and Resubmit on Spotify, and subscribe to the YouTube channel Weekend Researcher. You can also find the show on Amazon Prime and Apple Podcast. 🔔🎧📺 And as we begin, here is the question I cannot shake: when privilege survives for generations, are we really looking at inheritance, or at a family’s quiet genius for turning intimacy into infrastructure? 🤔✨

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aflevering Ghostly Futures and Organization Studies (Fleming & Rhodes, 2026) | In Memoriam artwork

Ghostly Futures and Organization Studies (Fleming & Rhodes, 2026) | In Memoriam

English Podcast Start at 00:00:00 Bengali Podcast Start at 00:30:49 Hindi Podcast Start at 00:49:08 Danish Podcast Start at 01:02:50 Reference Fleming, P., & Rhodes, C. (2026). Ghostly Futures and Organization Studies. Organization Studies. onlineFirst. https://doi.org/10.1177/01708406261447713 ‌Youtube channel link https://www.youtube.com/@weekendresearcher Podcast Website https://mayukhmukhopadhyay.com/reviseandresubmit EGOS In memoriam Peter Fleming https://www.egos.org/egos/about/in_memoriam_Fleming 🎙️👻 Welcome to Revise and Resubmit. Some papers arrive quietly. Others arrive carrying a silence that is impossible to ignore. Today's episode is one of those moments. Before we begin, we pause to remember Dr. Peter Fleming, who passed away in July 2026 at the age of 54. 🌹🕊️ We offer our deepest respect and our sincere condolences to his family, friends, colleagues, students, and the global academic community. His voice challenged complacency. His scholarship questioned power. His kindness shaped generations of researchers. Though he is no longer with us, his ideas continue to speak. Today we turn to Ghostly Futures and Organization Studies, a remarkable collaboration between Peter Fleming and Carl Rhodes, published online in Organization Studies, one of the world's most prestigious journals, recognized on both the emeritus FT and ABDC A* journal lists. 📚✨ This is not a paper about ghosts in the ordinary sense. It is about the futures that never arrived. The futures we quietly abandoned. The futures we fear are already waiting for us. The authors ask us to imagine organizations as places haunted not only by memories but also by possibilities. Some futures have been lost. Others have been denied. Still others appear on the horizon like approaching storms. Together they shape how people work, hope, hesitate, and sometimes surrender. 👥⏳ As I read this paper, I found myself thinking about every unfinished project, every abandoned reform, every promise that once felt within reach. Organizations often tell us to look ahead. Yet Fleming and Rhodes remind us that looking ahead can also fill us with disappointment, fatalism, or even despair. And perhaps the most unsettling realization is this. Sometimes the future controls the present long before it ever arrives. There is something deeply moving about reading these words now. They feel both intellectually daring and quietly personal. They remind me that scholarship can outlive the scholar. A thoughtful idea continues its journey even after its author has taken leave. So, as we begin today's conversation, I leave you with a question. 👀💭 What if the greatest force shaping our organizations is not the past we remember, but the future we have already stopped believing in? 🙏 Our heartfelt thanks to Dr. Peter Fleming, Professor Carl Rhodes, Organization Studies, and SAGE Publications for this profound and thought provoking contribution to organizational scholarship. 🎧 If you enjoy conversations like this, please subscribe to Revise and Resubmit on Spotify, and our YouTube channel, Weekend Researcher. You can also find us on Amazon Prime Music and Apple Podcasts. Your support helps us keep important research alive, one conversation at a time. 🌟📖

Gisteren1 h 17 min
aflevering Dark Academia (In Memoriam Peter Fleming 2021) - Weekend Book Review artwork

Dark Academia (In Memoriam Peter Fleming 2021) - Weekend Book Review

English Podcast starts at 00:00:00 Bengali Podcast Starts at 00:38:03 Hindi Podcast Starts at 00:57:32 Danish Podcast Starts at 01:16:23 Reference Peter Fleming (2021). Dark Academia: How Universities Die. Pluto Press. https://www.plutobooks.com/product/dark-academia/ ‌Youtube channel link https://www.youtube.com/@weekendresearcher Podcast Website https://mayukhmukhopadhyay.com/reviseandresubmit EGOS In memoriam Peter Fleming https://www.egos.org/egos/about/in_memoriam_Fleming 🎙️📚 Welcome to Revise and Resubmit, and to another episode of Weekend Book Review. Some books arrive at exactly the moment when they become impossible to read as ordinary books. They become conversations with someone whose voice we now know has fallen silent. Today feels like one of those moments. I come to Dark Academia: How Universities Die with a mixture of admiration and quiet sadness. Reading it now, I cannot help but hear more than an argument about universities. I hear the voice of a scholar who cared deeply about what a university could be, and who refused to mistake efficiency for education or management for wisdom. 🌧️📖 Peter Fleming never wrote to comfort institutions. He wrote to challenge them. Throughout a remarkable career spanning the University of Cambridge, Queen Mary University of London, Cass Business School, and later the University of Technology Sydney, he became one of the most fearless critics of corporate culture, neoliberalism, and the quiet erosion of human dignity in modern workplaces. Yet those who knew him remember something equally important. They remember a generous mentor, an ironic wit, and a colleague whose kindness matched the sharpness of his intellect. His passing in July 2026 leaves the academic world immeasurably poorer, but his ideas continue to ask difficult questions that refuse to disappear. 🕯️ In this book, Fleming invites me into what he calls the "zombie university," a place where metrics replace meaning, rankings eclipse curiosity, and scholars slowly surrender time, imagination, and even their health to systems that measure almost everything except genuine learning. The pages are often unsettling because they feel painfully familiar. Behind discussions of managerialism, commercialization, surveillance, and competition lies a quieter grief. It is the grief of watching an institution built for discovery gradually forget why it existed in the first place. As someone who has spent years inside academic life, I found myself pausing often. I was not simply reading about universities. I was thinking about corridors, supervisors, classrooms, late night writing sessions, and the fragile hope that knowledge can still change both people and society. Perhaps that is why this book feels less like a critique and more like a warning offered with genuine affection. 🍂✨ So today, let us revisit a work that asks uncomfortable questions with remarkable honesty. And as we begin, I wonder whether the real question is not whether universities are dying, but whether we still remember what they were meant to keep alive. 🤔💭 🙏 My heartfelt thanks to Professor Peter Fleming and Pluto Press for giving us a book that continues to provoke, unsettle, and inspire. 🎧 If you enjoy thoughtful conversations like this, please subscribe to Revise and Resubmit on Spotify, and our YouTube channel, Weekend Researcher. You can also find us on Amazon Prime Music and Apple Podcasts. Your support helps us keep important books and important conversations alive. 🌟📚

11 jul 20261 h 31 min
aflevering Unwind the clock? (Koo et al., 2026) | FT50 SMJ artwork

Unwind the clock? (Koo et al., 2026) | FT50 SMJ

English Podcast Starts at 00:00:00 Bengali Podcast Starts at 00:43:49 Hindi Podcast Starts at 01:04:49 Danish Podcast Starts at 01:23:28 Reference Koo, W. W., Zhang, M., & Choudhury, P. (2026). Unwind the clock? Temporal distance and user interactions on a digital platform. Strategic Management Journal, 1–26. https://doi.org/10.1002/smj.70105 ‌ ‌Youtube Channel ⁠https://www.youtube.com/@weekendresearcher⁠ Podcast Website https://mayukhmukhopadhyay.com/reviseandresubmit Academy of Management PDW on Space Economy Registration Flyer https://cto.aom.org/discussion/flagship-aom-2026-pdw-space-economy-consolidating-a-research-agenda-8 AOM SIM Curriculum Committee https://sim.aom.org/curriculum/curriculum-committee AOM SIM-Bytes Episode 1 - Dr Ed Freeman https://www.youtube.com/shorts/EBSA7WvQNSI Linkedin Post By Professor Erica Steckler https://www.linkedin.com/posts/erica-steckler-ph-d-427272_simbyte-episode-1-ed-freeman-activity-7469092002098225152-PbHM 🎙️🌍 Welcome to Revise and Resubmit, a place where research is not merely read, but remembered. Thank you for joining me. There are moments when the world feels astonishingly connected. A question is asked in one country. An answer appears from another. Somewhere between midnight and sunrise, knowledge quietly crosses an ocean. We often imagine this journey to be effortless. Yet perhaps it is not. 🌌💭 Today, I invite you to linger over a remarkable paper titled "Unwind the Clock? Temporal Distance and User Interactions on a Digital Platform." Written by Wesley W. Koo, Miaomiao Zhang, and Prithwiraj Choudhury, and published in the Strategic Management Journal, one of the world's most prestigious FT50 academic journals, this study asks us to notice something we rarely see. ⏰📚✨ Time, after all, leaves no footprints. It slips quietly between people who may never know they almost met. Using proprietary data from StackOverflow, the authors reveal that every additional hour separating two regions quietly weakens the exchange of ideas. Fewer questions are seen. Fewer answers receive recognition. Conversations that might have changed someone's understanding simply fade into silence because the participants happen to live on different sides of the clock. 🌎⌛💻 What touched me most was not the mathematics, elegant though it is. It was the thought that the smallest and most specialized communities bear the greatest burden. The familiar subjects continue to find listeners. But the rare questions, the unusual skills, the lonely corners where expertise patiently waits, often remain unseen because nobody happens to be awake at the right moment. 🌱💡 And yet the paper offers quiet hope. It suggests that platforms need not surrender to the tyranny of chronology. By gently reshaping how content is presented, by allowing important ideas to surface beyond the instant they were created, technology can become less of a clock and more of a bridge. 🌉✨ Perhaps that is the deeper story here. Progress is not always about moving faster. Sometimes it begins by waiting long enough for someone else, somewhere else, to arrive. So as we begin today's conversation, I leave you with a question. 🤔💫 If knowledge can disappear simply because two curious minds greet the same day at different hours, how many remarkable conversations have already passed us by without either person ever realizing they almost met? 🙏 My heartfelt thanks to Wesley W. Koo, Miaomiao Zhang, and Prithwiraj Choudhury, and to John Wiley & Sons Ltd. for publishing this outstanding contribution in the Strategic Management Journal, a globally respected FT50 journal that continues to shape the frontiers of management research. 🌟📖 🎧 If you enjoy these journeys into influential scholarship, please subscribe to Revise and Resubmit on Spotify, subscribe to Weekend Researcher on YouTube, and remember that our episodes are also available on Amazon Prime and Apple Podcasts. Until next time, thank you for listening. 🌍🎙️📚

5 jul 20261 h 45 min
aflevering False-Positive Psychology (Simmons et al. 2011) - Weekend Classics artwork

False-Positive Psychology (Simmons et al. 2011) - Weekend Classics

English Podcast starts at 00:00:00 Bengali Podcast Starts at 00:24:36 Hindi Podcast Starts at 00:47:20 Danish Podcast Starts at 01:10:11 Reference Simmons, J. P., Nelson, L. D., & Simonsohn, U. (2011). False-Positive Psychology: Undisclosed Flexibility in Data Collection and Analysis Allows Presenting Anything as Significant: Undisclosed Flexibility in Data Collection and Analysis Allows Presenting Anything as Significant. Psychological Science, 22(11), 1359-1366. https://doi.org/10.1177/0956797611417632 ‌Youtube channel link https://www.youtube.com/@weekendresearcher Podcast Website https://mayukhmukhopadhyay.com/reviseandresubmit/ 🎙️✨ Welcome to Revise and Resubmit, and to another episode of Weekend Classics. Grab your favorite cup of coffee, settle into your chair, and join me for a journey through one of those rare research papers that quietly changed the way an entire generation of scholars thinks about science. 📚☕ Have you ever wondered whether a statistically significant result is always telling the truth? Or could it simply be the product of a hundred tiny decisions that nobody ever gets to see? 🤔 Today, I am opening a paper that did exactly that. In 2011, Joseph P. Simmons, Leif D. Nelson, and Uri Simonsohn held up a mirror to psychological research and asked an uncomfortable question. What if researchers, often with no dishonest intention at all, could make almost any hypothesis appear significant simply by making ordinary choices about collecting data, selecting variables, or deciding when enough participants had been tested? 📊🔍 The brilliance of this paper is not that it accuses science. It reminds us that science is deeply human. Every spreadsheet carries judgment. Every analysis carries choice. Every manuscript tells a story about what was included and what quietly remained in the shadows. 🌱 To make their point unforgettable, the authors even presented a delightfully absurd experiment suggesting that listening to music could literally make people younger. It sounds ridiculous, and that is exactly why it works. The satire exposes a serious weakness. If flexibility hides in the research process, almost anything can look convincing. 🎵⏳😄 But this is not a story about broken science. It is a story about better science. The paper ends with practical recommendations for authors and reviewers, showing that transparency does not require expensive tools or impossible standards. It simply requires the courage to reveal the full journey instead of only the polished destination. 💡📖 So, before we begin, ask yourself this. If truth depends not only on the data we collect but also on the choices we never report, how many celebrated discoveries would survive if every hidden decision stepped into the light? 🌍✨ 🙏 My sincere thanks to Joseph P. Simmons, Leif D. Nelson, and Uri Simonsohn, and to the Association for Psychological Science for publishing this remarkable work in Psychological Science. 🎧 If you enjoy episodes like this, please subscribe to Revise and Resubmit on Spotify, subscribe to Weekend Researcher on YouTube, and remember that you can also listen on Amazon Prime Music and Apple Podcasts. Your support helps keep thoughtful research conversations alive. 🚀📚

4 jul 20261 h 35 min
aflevering The unintended (negative) consequence of training (Gyensare et al., 2025) | ABDC-A* JOOP artwork

The unintended (negative) consequence of training (Gyensare et al., 2025) | ABDC-A* JOOP

English Podcast Starts at 00:00:00 Bengali Podcast Starts at 00:49:49 Hindi Podcast Starts at 01:10:05 Danish Podcast Starts at 01:27:44 Reference Gyensare, M. A., Soetan, G., Ogbonnaya, C., Agyapong, J.-A., & Roodbari, H. (2025). Sustaining employees thriving at work through polychronicity and work engagement: The unintended (negative) consequence of training. Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology, 98, e70017. https://doi.org/10.1111/joop.70017 ‌Youtube Channel ⁠https://www.youtube.com/@weekendresearcher⁠ Podcast Website https://mayukhmukhopadhyay.com/reviseandresubmit AOM SIM Curriculum Committee https://sim.aom.org/curriculum/curriculum-committee AOM SIM-Bytes Episode 1 - Dr Ed Freeman https://www.youtube.com/shorts/EBSA7WvQNSI Linkedin Post By Professor Erica Steckler https://www.linkedin.com/posts/erica-steckler-ph-d-427272_simbyte-episode-1-ed-freeman-activity-7469092002098225152-PbHM Welcome to 🎙️✨ Revise and Resubmit ✨🎙️, the podcast where academic research meets human stories, where journal articles become conversations, and where every paper invites us to see familiar workplaces in a slightly different light. 📚 Today, we turn our attention to an intriguing article published in the prestigious Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology, an ABDC-A* ranked journal that has long served as a home for rigorous scholarship on work, people, and organizations. The paper, "Sustaining Employees Thriving at Work Through Polychronicity and Work Engagement: The Unintended (Negative) Consequence of Training", by Michael Asiedu Gyensare, Gbemisola Soetan, Chidiebere Ogbonnaya, Joan-Ark Agyapong, and Hamid Roodbari, asks a deceptively simple question. 🌱 Why do some employees continue to learn, grow, and flourish even when their workdays seem crowded with competing demands? Imagine a hotel lobby on a busy afternoon. A frontline employee welcomes guests, answers calls, resolves complaints, coordinates with colleagues, and somehow still finds room to learn something new. We often celebrate this ability as efficiency. Yet beneath that surface lies a deeper story about attention, energy, and the quiet ways people sustain themselves at work. 🧩 The authors explore the idea of polychronicity, a person's preference for handling multiple activities at once. Their findings suggest that people comfortable with juggling tasks often become more engaged in their work, and that engagement fuels learning, one of the key dimensions of thriving at work. But here the story takes an unexpected turn. 🎭 Training, something organizations usually view as unquestionably beneficial, can sometimes become a burden. When training demands too much time, effort, or emotional energy, it begins to erode the very engagement it seeks to create. What appears to be nourishment can, under certain circumstances, become exhaustion. There is something quietly profound about that insight. The path to growth is not always blocked by a lack of opportunities. Sometimes it is crowded by too many of them. 🌟 As we explore this study, conducted with 261 frontline hotel employees and their colleagues across ten four-star hotels in Ghana, we will reflect on a timeless organizational dilemma. How do we help people become better without overwhelming them in the process? 🤔 And perhaps the deeper question is this: when organizations offer us more opportunities to learn, how do we know whether those opportunities are helping us thrive, or merely teaching us new ways to become tired? 🙏 Our sincere thanks to the authors for their thoughtful contribution and to John Wiley & Sons Ltd and the British Psychological Society for publishing this important work. 📖 If you enjoy conversations about cutting-edge academic research, please subscribe to Revise and Resubmit on Spotify, YouTube channel Weekend Researcher, Amazon Prime, and Apple Podcasts. 🔔🎧 Until next time, keep reading, keep questioning, and keep revising. 📚✨

28 jun 20261 h 46 min