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Case by Professor Kisilowski featured by European Case Clearing House

Professor Maciej Kisilowski
Bulldogs under the Carpet, the case series authored by Maciej Kisilowski, IRI Co-Director and Assistant Professor of Law and Public Management at CEU Business School, has received a ‘featured case’ status by the European Case Clearing House (ECCH). ECCH, which distributed the case worldwide, has published an extensive interview with Professor Kisilowski that is focused on his field research for the case and various difficulties stemming from the highly controversial subject matter that case tackles. 
The ECCH was particularly interested in a short movie featuring a dramatic reenactment of the key events of the case. The movie has been produced by Central European University and is also distributed by ECCH. “I believe that if my class does not create a mix of intellectual and emotional stimuli that make my participants feel like THEY are the characters of a case we discuss, if they don't leave the room truly disturbed by the complexity and messiness of the managerial situation we analysed, then I am failing in my job,” argued Professor Kisilowski. “I think multimedia can make the task of creating such an 'artificial reality' much easier.”
To read the entire interview, visit www.ecch.com 

Bulldogs under the Carpet, the case series authored by Maciej Kisilowski, IRI Co-Director and Assistant Professor of Law and Public Management at CEU Business School, has received a ‘featured case’ status by the European Case Clearing House (ECCH). ECCH, which distributed the case worldwide, has published an extensive interview with Professor Kisilowski that is focused on his field research for the case and various difficulties stemming from the highly controversial subject matter that case tackles. 

The ECCH was particularly interested in a short movie featuring a dramatic reenactment of the key events of the case. The movie has been produced by Central European University and is also distributed by ECCH. “I believe that if my class does not create a mix of intellectual and emotional stimuli that make my participants feel like THEY are the characters of a case we discuss, if they don't leave the room truly disturbed by the complexity and messiness of the managerial situation we analysed, then I am failing in my job,” argued Professor Kisilowski. “I think multimedia can make the task of creating such an 'artificial reality' much easier.”

To read the entire interview, visit www.ecch.com