Monday, December 12, 2016

Phenomenology - Blog Book - Table of Contents

Phenomenology - Blog Book - References




References

1. Brooks, D. (2008). The behavioral revolution. The New York Times, October 27, pp A. 31.

2. Coomer, D.L., & Hultgren, F.H. (1989). Considering alternatives: an invitation to dialog and question. In D.L. Commer & F.H. Hultgren (Eds), Alternative modes of inquiry. Washington DC: American Home Economics Association, Teacher Education Section.

3. Courtenay B.C., Merriam, S.B. & Reeves, P.M. (1998). The centrality of meaning-making in transformational learning: how HIV positive adults make sense of their lives, Adult Education Quarterly, 48 (2), pp. 65-84.

4. Denzin, N.A. & Lincoln, Y.S. (1994). Introduction: entering the field of interpretive research. In N.K. Denzin and Y.S. Lincoln (Eds.), Handbook of interpretive research (pp. 1-17). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage publications.

5. Derman, E. & Wilmott, P. (2009). Perfect models imperfect world. Businessweek, January 12, pp. 59-60.

8. Enrich, L. (2005). Revisiting phenomenology: it’s potential for management research. In proceedings challenges or organizations in global markets. British Academy of Management Conference, pp. 1-13.

11. Giorgi, A. (1997). Theory, practice, and evaluation of the phenomenological method as a interpretive research procedure, Journal of Phenomenological Psychology, 28 (2), pp. 235-260.

12. Hirshleifer, D. (2001). Investor psychology and asset pricing. The Journal of Finance, 56 (4).

13. Hirshleifer, D., Teoh, S.H. (2003). Herd behavior and cascading in capital markets: a review and synthesis, European Financial Management, 9 (1), pp.25-66.

14. Hultgren, F.H. (1989). Introduction to Interpretive Inquiry. In F.H. Hultgren & D.L. Coomer (Eds). Alternative modes of inquiry. Washington D.C., American Home Economics Association, Teacher Education Section, pp. 283-290.

15. Kane, E.J. (1989) Changing incentives facing financial-services regulators, Journal of Financial Services Research, 2, (3), pp. 265-274

16. Lewis, M. (2008). The End. Portfolio.com, December.

17. Lohr, S. (2008). In modeling risk, the human factor was left out, The New York Times, November 4, pp. B1.

18. McClelland, J. (1995). Sending children to kindergarten: a phenomenological study of mother’s experiences, Family Relations, 44 (2).

19. Phenomenological Research and its Potential for Understanding Financial Models, Michael S Wilson, USA

20. Polkinghorne, D. (1989). Methodology for the human sciences: systems of inquiry. Albany, NY: University of New York Press.

26. Van Manen, M. (2001). Researching Lived Experience. Human Science for an Action Sensitive Pedagogy (2nd ed.). Alberta, Canada: Althouse Press.

27. Ehrich, Lisa (2005) Revisiting phenomenology: its potential for management research. In Proceedings Challenges or organisations in global markets, British Academy of Management
Conference, pages pp. 1-13, Said Business School, Oxford University.

28. Sebastian Reiter, Glenn Stewart and Christian Bruce,  A Strategy for Delayed Research Method Selection: Deciding between Grounded Theory and Phenomenology, The Electronic journal of Business Research Methods, Vol-9, Issue-1, 2011,pp 35-46