News

A proposal by Assistant Professor of Management Lauren Lanahan earned a two-year funding grant from the National Science Foundation.

Roger Best, John McPhee, and Andrew Hamburg quantify the relationship between supply chain management and profitability.

Patagonia's Worn Wear Tour will make a stop at the University of Oregon as part of Net Impact's April 18 SPRNG event.

A competition that some might consider the business plan Olympics comes to Portland when the New Venture Championship kicks off April 13.

Lundquist College entrepreneurs are transforming industries and adding value. In recent weeks, both undergraduate and graduate students have achieved noteworthy success.

The Lundquist College of Business jumped up 10 places in the University of Texas at Dallas’s 2017 Top 100 Business School Research Rankings thanks to our research-productive faculty.

Skyward, a drone management software firm that began at the Lundquist College of Business, is seeing skyrocketing success.

A new study from the Lundquist College of Business accounting department found that, in most cases, the assumption that low taxes equal risky choices isn't consistent with the evidence.

Accounting instructor Bruce Darling passed away last month at the age of 65. A memorial will be held March 20 to remember his service to his students.

Student volunteers from the Beta Alpha Psi accounting fraternity are offering free preparation of simple federal and state tax returns as part of the VITA program.

Two international students spent winter break creating and building innovative sneaker designs.

Sherlyn Koh came to the Sports Product Management program from Singapore with the dream of working in global football.
Colin Stuart left the NHL to pursue his master’s in sports product management after playing several years of professional hockey in the United States and abroad.

A team of four Warsaw Sports Marketing Center MBA students won the 2017 National Sports Forum (NSF) Case Cup in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Assistant professor of management Reut Livne-Tarandach’s fall management course had MBA students collaborating with peers representing eight universities and 20 different countries.