Joe Magee
Associated Associate Professor of Public Service, NYU Wagner; Associate Professor of Management and Organizations, NYU Stern School of Business at Wagner Graduate School of Public Service
Professor of Management and Organizations at Leonard N. Stern School of Business
Schools
- Leonard N. Stern School of Business
- Wagner Graduate School of Public Service
Expertise
Links
Biography
Wagner Graduate School of Public Service
My research revolves around the roles of hierarchy in organizations and society. I have investigated how power differences transform the way people think and behave and how people figure out who has power over whom. My colleagues and I have discovered a series of reliable changes in the psychology of power-holders that seem to be potentially damaging for relationships, organizations, and society but, under certain conditions, actually can contribute to interpersonal and institutional effectiveness. I am also interested in the neuroscience underpinning various kinds of social judgments and the social role of emotion in groups.
At the Wagner School, I teach Managing Public Service Organizations, Power and Influence in Organizations and Politics, and the Capstone Advanced Team Seminar. At the Stern School, I teach Power and Professional Influence to full-time and part-time MBA students.
I have worked on issues of organizational strategy and structure, power and politics, conflict and negotiation, motivation, and organizational culture with various organizations including The United States Conference of Mayors, The National Association of Counties, and the Department of Transportation, Parks and Recreation, and Intergovernmental Affairs in the NYC government.
Areas of Expertise
Inequality
Leadership
Management
Power
Public & Nonprofit Organizations
Leonard N. Stern School of Business
Joe Magee, Professor of Management and Organizations, joined New York University Stern School of Business in September 2004. Professor Magee's research revolves around the roles of hierarchy in organizations and society. He has investigated how power differences transform the way people think and behave and how people figure out who has power over whom. Professor Magee and his colleagues discovered a series of reliable changes in the psychology of power-holders that seem to be potentially damaging for relationships and organizations but, under certain conditions, actually can contribute to interpersonal and organizational effectiveness. He has also published on the social role of emotion.
Professor Magee is also affiliated with NYU's Psychology Department and Wagner School of Public Service.
Research Interests
- Psychology of power
- Foundations of social hierarchy
- Social role of emotion
Courses Taught
- Advanced Research in Organizational Behavior
- Leadership in Organizations
- Power and Professional Influence
Academic Background
Ph.D., Organizational Behavior, 2004
Stanford UniversityA.B., Psychology, 1996
University of Michigan
Awards & Appointments
- Association of Psychological Science (APS) Rising Star 2011
- Academy of Management, Managerial and Organizational Cognition Division Best Paper Award 2009
- Eastern Academy of Management Outstanding Empirical Paper Award 2008
Selected Publications
Rucker, D. D., Galinsky, A. D., & Magee, J. C. (2018)
The agentic-communal model of advantage and disadvantage: How inequality produces similarities in the psychology of power, social class, gender, and race. J. M. Olson (Ed.), Advances in Experimental Social Psychology (Vol. 58, pp. 71-125). Cambridge, MARothman, N. B., & Magee, J. C. (2016)
Affective expressions in groups and inferences about members’ relational well-being: The effects of socially engaging and disengaging emotions
Cognition and Emotion, 30, 150-166Waytz, A., Chou, E. Y., Magee, J. C., & Galinsky, A. D. (2015)
Not so lonely at the top: The relationship between power and loneliness Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 130, 69-78West, T. V., Magee, J. C., Gordon, S. H., & Gullett, L. (2014)
A little similarity goes a long way: The effects of peripheral but self-revealing similarities on improving and sustaining interracial relationships
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 107, 81-100Galinsky, A. D., Magee, J. C., Rus, D., Rothman, N. B., & Todd, A. R (2014)
Acceleration with steering: The synergistic benefits of combining power with perspective-taking
Social Psychological and Personality Science, 5, 627-635Magee, J. C., & Smith, P. K. (2013)
The social distance theory of power
Personality and Social Psychology Review, 17, 158-186
Videos
How Does Power Shape Our Perception?
Stern Voices: Professor Joe Magee
Read about executive education
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