“Business is a noble vocation, directed to producing wealth and improving our world. It can be a fruitful source of prosperity for the areas in which it operates, especially if it sees the creation of jobs as an essential part of its service to the common good.”
Shaping the Next Generation of Responsible Leaders
The first Inspirational Paradigm for Jesuit Business Education was published in July 2020 by an International Association of Jesuit Universities (IAJU) taskforce. It issued a vital call to action: we must re-examine how we prepare future business leaders to meet mounting global challenges.
While significant progress has been made, our global landscape has faced profound disruptions since that first edition, including:
- A global pandemic
- Escalating regional and international conflicts
- The rapid emergence of Generative Artificial Intelligence (AI)
These shifts have intensified inequalities, transformed the nature of work, and raised urgent ethical, social, and anthropological questions. Today’s realities demand a renewed approach—one grounded in greater depth, urgency, and discernment.
A Vision of Inclusion and Innovation
Drawing inspiration from Pope Francis’ encyclical, Fratelli Tutti, the second edition of the Inspirational Paradigm proposes a framework of radical inclusion.
Key Pillars of the Updated Paradigm:
- Economic Justice: Sharing the
benefits of increasing wealth to improve social conditions for all, serving as
a counterweight to traditional wealth creation that ignores environmental and
societal impacts.
- Ethical Tech Integration: Encouraging
business schools to discern how to responsibly incorporate AI into teaching and
scholarship, drawing upon the principles of Pope Leo XIV’s Magnifica
Humanitas.
- Curricular Transformation: Recreating
economics, business, and finance curricula through the lens of the Ignatian
pedagogical paradigm.
- Stakeholder Engagement: Actively defining
the vital roles that students, faculty, and leadership play in this new
ecosystem.
Our Responsibility as Educators
Universities—and business schools specifically—play a crucial role in driving positive change. At a minimum, our responsibility is to:
- Raise student awareness regarding systemic global issues.
- Provide a framework for reflection so students understand their role in the solution.
- Support faculty and students as they develop concrete, actionable responses to these challenges.
The Journey So Far
This movement began in March 2019, when 12 business education leaders convened at the invitation of the IAJU. Inspired by Pope Francis’ encyclical Laudato Si’ and the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), the task force listened closely to the voices of concerned students, forward-thinking faculty, and global thought leaders to pioneer a new era of business education.
For questions about the ongoing work of the taskforce, please contact the co-chairs, Cristina Gimenez Thomsen ([email protected]) and Joseph Phillips ([email protected]).
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A Workbook on Effective Collaboration
A workbook to enable Ecoteams in each Jesuit Conference to grow and strengthen the process of greater collaboration.
A report presented by the ‘Ecology Task Force discusses the deterioration of the environment, the reconciliation with creation, the effect on living conditions, and the ways to preserve the environment.
The pope critiques consumerism and irresponsible development, laments environmental degradation and global warming, and calls the world to take "swift and unified global action."
IAJBS: International Association of Jesuit Business Schools
CJBE: Colleagues in Jesuit Business Education
ECOJESUIT: Ecology and Jesuits in Communication, Ignatian advocacy group
IAJES: International Association of Jesuit Engineering Schools
HEST: Higher Education for Social Transformation, Cluster in Ecology and Environmental Challenges.
Red de Homólogos de Ambiente y Sustentabilidad
REPAM: Red Eclesial Pan-Amazónica
subcommittees
Alvaro de la Rica, Chair, Dean at Deusto, UNIJES, Spain
Marianus Kujur, SJ, XISS, Ranchi, India
Claudia Ibarra, Dean at ITESO, Mexico
Ricardo Flores, Dean at UCA El Salvador, Central America
Gisela Veritier, Dean at ICDA for East Latin America
Eduardo Saavedra, Dean at Universidad Alberto Hurtado de Chile for West Latin America
Joe Eisenhauer, Dean at Detroit Mercy, USA
Karl Alorbi, Faculty at St. Peter’s, USA
Pilar Tolentino, Faculty at Ateneo Manila, Philippines
Gisela Veritier, Chair, ICDA Business School of the Catholic University of Córdoba
Joan Lee, Professor, Fairfield
Michael Pierson, Professor, Fordham
Itzel Palomares, Research Professor, ITESO
Prashant Malaviya, Professor, Georgetown
Marta de Vicente Lama, Senior Lecturer, Loyola Andalucia
Abel B. N’Djomon, SJ, Program Head, CERAP
Assunta Cuyegkeng, Professor, Ateneo Manila
S. George, SJ Director, XLRI
Javier Marquez Vigil Professor, Universidad Pontificia Comillas
Dayle Smith, Chair, Dean, Loyola Marymount
Jim Joseph Dean, Le Moyne College
Barnali Gupta Dean, St. Louis
Claudia Ibarra Dean, ITESO
Teresa Corzo Santamaria Dean, Comillas
Colette Darcy Dean, National College of Ireland Colette.
Roberto Galang Dean, Ateneo Manila
Isabelle Chaquiriand Dean, Uruguay
Joseph Arun, SJ Director, LIBA
Nicky Santos, SJ Chair, Associate Professor, Creighton
Rudy Ang, VP for Administration and Info Systems, Ateneo Manila
Jose Dela Cerda Professor, ITESO
Jimmy Hill VP Academic Affairs, National College of Ireland
Dominic H. Chai, SJ Graduate Student, Boston College
Tracy Couto Director, Savage-McGill Center, Le Moyne College
Pilar Castro Gonzales Dean, Loyola Andalucia
Georges Aoun Professor, St. Joseph Beirut
