Generated by GPT-5-mini| Global Network for Advanced Management | |
|---|---|
| Name | Global Network for Advanced Management |
| Abbr | GNAM |
| Founded | 2012 |
| Founder | Yale School of Management |
| Type | Consortium |
| Location | New Haven, Connecticut, United States |
Global Network for Advanced Management is an international consortium of business schools and management institutions convened to promote collaborative learning, research, and global leadership. The network links executive programs, graduate faculties, and research centers across multiple continents to facilitate student exchanges, joint courses, and faculty collaboration. It aims to connect institutions in diverse regions to enhance cross-border management practice and scholarship.
The initiative was launched in 2012 by Yale School of Management with partnerships including INSEAD, London Business School, IE Business School, National University of Singapore, and University of Chicago Booth School of Business as early collaborators. During its founding phase the consortium engaged with institutions such as HEC Paris, Wharton School, Stanford Graduate School of Business, and Harvard Business School to expand curricular experimentation. Over subsequent years the network expanded membership to include universities from Africa, Asia, Latin America, and Oceania and partnered with organizations like World Bank, International Monetary Fund, United Nations, and World Economic Forum for convenings. The formative activities coincided with initiatives from Fulbright Program exchanges and global education efforts modeled after consortia like Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business and Erasmus Mundus.
Membership comprises full partner institutions including schools such as SDA Bocconi School of Management, IESE Business School, ESADE Business School, Indian School of Business, Fudan University School of Management, Keio University Business School, Copenhagen Business School, Melbourne Business School, Tsinghua University School of Economics and Management, and University of Cape Town Graduate School of Business. Each partner appoints faculty and administrative liaisons drawn from centers like MIT Sloan School of Management research groups, Columbia Business School institutes, and Kellogg School of Management departments. The network adopts a hub-and-spoke coordination model influenced by consortia such as Global Alliance in Management Education and governance practices from institutions like Carnegie Mellon University and University of Oxford Saïd Business School. Regional nodes reflect participation from national institutions including Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, University of São Paulo, University of Ghana Business School, and Auckland University of Technology.
Core activities include cross-registration programs similar to initiatives at Rotman School of Management, joint online offerings reminiscent of collaborations between Coursera partners and universities like University of Pennsylvania, and intensive modules hosted with partners such as Bocconi and IE Business School. The network organizes global courses that convene students from Yale School of Management, INSEAD, LBS, and NUS for case-based learning drawing on cases from Harvard Business School Publishing, and field projects conducted with agencies like UN Development Programme and USAID. Signature events include summits and workshops featuring speakers from McKinsey & Company, Boston Consulting Group, Goldman Sachs, and World Economic Forum delegations, as well as collaborative research projects with think tanks like Brookings Institution and Chatham House. The network also runs faculty development exchanges informed by models from Fulbright Program and fellowship schemes such as Rhodes Scholarship-linked programs.
Governance uses an executive committee structure with representatives from founding partners including Yale School of Management, INSEAD, and London Business School, supported by steering committees resembling governance practices at AACSB International and EFMD. Financial support mixes institutional membership fees, philanthropic grants from foundations analogous to Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and Ford Foundation, and project funding from multilateral entities such as European Commission programs and Asian Development Bank. Administrative operations are coordinated from a central secretariat based at Yale University with contributions from partner administrative offices modelled on joint ventures like those between Columbia University and corporate partners such as IBM or Microsoft for educational technology.
The network has been recognized in academic and practitioner circles, with case studies and coverage in outlets affiliated with Financial Times, The Economist, Harvard Business Review, and MIT Technology Review. Its alumni have gone on to leadership roles at organizations including United Nations, World Bank Group, McKinsey & Company, Goldman Sachs, Procter & Gamble, and national ministries represented by alumni from India, Brazil, Nigeria, and China. The consortium's model has been cited in reports by Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, UNESCO, and regional accreditation bodies such as AACSB International as an example of cross-border academic collaboration. Awards and recognition include keynote invitations at forums like World Economic Forum Annual Meeting and participation in global initiatives such as Sustainable Development Goals implementation dialogues.
Category:Business school consortia