Scott Hammond
Management
Clinical Professor
Contact Information
Office Location: Salt Lake CenterPhone: 801.368.4027
Email: scott.hammond@usu.edu
Additional Information:
Biography
Ph.D., University of Utah, 1997. Professor of Practice. Leading expert in highly reliable teams. Former Asst. Academic Vice President Utah Valley University. Former Department Chair. Author, speaker, consultant.
Teaching Interests
Leadership, Teams, HR Management, Organizational Behavior.
Research Interests
Highly reliable teams in the context of EMS, Search and Rescue, law enforcement, and other high consequence activities. Lost Person Behavior. Cross-Cultural issues in global management.
Awards
Finalist Independent Book of the Year, 2017
Foreward Review
2015 Best Paper, 2016
Journal of Management Inquiry
Faculty Research Fellow, 2015
Shingo Institute
Barnes and Noble Featured Author, 2013
Barnes and Noble Bookstore
Publications | Books
- Hammond, S., (2014). Lessons of the Lost: Finding Hope and Resilience in Work, Life, and the Wilderness. *
- Hammond, S., (2013). Lessons of the Lost: Finding Hope and Resilience in Work, Life, and the Wilderness. iUniverse/Berrett/Koeler
- Hammond, S.C, Jones Chrsitensen, L., Senior, J., (2015). Finding the Lost Freshman: Helping Students through the Wilderness of their First Year. Self *
- Hammond, S., Finding the Lost Freshman. iUniverse *
Publications | Book Chapters
An asterisk (*) at the end of a publication indicates that it has not been peer-reviewed.
Publications | Journal Articles
Academic Journal
- Jones Chrsitensen, L., Hammond, S.C, (2015). Lost (but not missing) at Work: Organizational Lostness as an employee response to change. Journal of Management Inquiry
Professional Journal
An asterisk (*) at the end of a publication indicates that it has not been peer-reviewed.
Publications | MultiMedia
Audio
- Hammond, S., (2014). Lessons of the Lost: Finding Hope and Resilience in Work, Life, and the Wilderness. audiblecom *
An asterisk (*) at the end of a publication indicates that it has not been peer-reviewed.
Publications | Other
An asterisk (*) at the end of a publication indicates that it has not been peer-reviewed.