Professor
Obstfeld’s research examines how the knowledge-intensive social processes that
result in organizational change and innovation unfold at the local and firm
levels. Currently, his interests focus on how combinatorial action,
knowledge articulation, creative projects, and collective action yield new
insights for strategy, organization theory, and leadership.
His
publications include “The role of affect in creative projects and exploratory
search,” with Paul Adler (Industrial and Corporate Change, 2007); "Social
Networks, The Tertius
Iungens Orientation, and Involvement
in Innovation" (Administrative Science Quarterly, 2005); "Organizing and the
Process of Sensemaking," with Karl Weick and Kathleen Sutcliffe (Organization
Science, 2005); “Social Capital by Design: Structures, Strategies, and
Institutional Context,” with Wayne Baker in Corporate Social Capital and
Liability; and “Organizing for High Reliability: Processes of Collective
Mindfulness,” in Research in Organizational Behavior with Karl Weick and
Kathleen Sutcliffe.
Professor’s
Obstfeld’s 2005 Administrative Science Quarterly paper, “Social Networks, the
Tertius Iungens Orientation, and
Involvement in Innovation,” just won the 2007 W. Richard Scott Award from the
American Sociological Association’s Organizations, Occupations and Work (OOW)
division for outstanding contribution to the discipline in an article published
within the last three years.
Recently,
Professor Obstfeld received a $322,000 grant from the National Science
Foundation to study organizational innovation. Entitled “Brokerage, Social
Networks, Knowledge-Based Innovation,” it is sponsored by the Innovation and
Organizational Change, Sociology, and Law and Social Science directorates of the
NSF.
Professor
Obstfeld, in collaboration with technology pundit and Chief of Confusion, John
Seely Brown (http://www.johnseelybrown.com/),
recently completed the first installment of
edge – a new
course that explores how technology and globalization are transforming the
business landscape. (See the course website at:
http://edge.merage.uci.edu/)
Dr. Obstfeld
received his Ph.D. from the University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business.
Prior to embarking on an academic career, he served as Director of Training and
Development at The Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae).