
Amelia Hawbaker
Postdoctoral Research Fellow
- amelia.hawbaker@sbs.ox.ac.uk
Oxford University Centre for Corporate Reputation
Saïd Business School
University of Oxford
Park End Street
Oxford
OX1 1HP
Profile
Amelia is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Oxford University Centre for Corporate Reputation. She is working with Tom Lawrence, Professor of Strategic Management, on a study on organisational innovation and work in agencies providing social services for end-of-life care and those providing services for the chronically unhoused.
Amelia completed her PhD in Sociology at Indiana University, Bloomington. Her research areas include healthcare organisations, institutional theory, organisational change and medical sociology. Amelia’s methodological expertise is in qualitative methods, particularly ethnography and qualitative interviewing.
In her previous work, Amelia has examined work practices among medical providers in US hospitals, public opinion of formal medicine and reproductive health and reactions to workforce expansion among medical providers.
Before joining Saïd Business School, Amelia was a postdoctoral fellow at the Indiana University School of Public Health, Department of Applied Health Sciences. She has also worked closely with several local and state agencies in the US on healthcare research.
Publications
Attitudes toward abortion legality and abortion regulation: Insights from a nationally representative study(opens in new window)
- Journal article
- Social Science Quarterly
Medicine and abortion: public trust in medical authority and Americans’ acceptance of legal abortion(opens in new window)
- Journal article
- SSM - Qualitative Research in Health
Using a semi-structured qualitative interview to evaluate pediatric interns’ use of the electronic medical record in a simulated setting(opens in new window)
- Journal article
- Cureus
The case for an inhabited institutionalism in organizational research: interaction, coupling, and change reconsidered(opens in new window)
- Journal article
- Theory and Society
The health of college students on the autism spectrum as compared to their neurotypical peers(opens in new window)
- Journal article
- Autism