García Alvarez, Santiago
Main Affiliation
Preferred name
García Alvarez, Santiago
Official Name
García Alvarez, Santiago
ORCID
0000-0003-3750-4053
Scopus Author ID
57191909801
7 results
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Item type:Publication, The influence of graduate attributes and humanistic principles on leadership, social responsibility, and performance(Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2025-06-14); ; - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, Co-Creating Value Through People-Centered Leadership: Lessons Learned from the COVID-19 Crisis(Springer Nature, 2023); COVID-19 has represented a crisis and a turning point in business dynamics. The lockdown forced people to work from home in a more flexible and technologically intensive manner. Now, well into the post-COVID-19 lockdown phase, there are numerous challenges for organizations, particularly, a person-centered leadership that may drive the co-creation of value through greater flexibility, optimal technology use, efficiency, and collaborator well-being. In this framework, adhocracy is proposed and discussed as a model to build work communities that respond to the needs of the post-pandemic lockdown world. ©The authorsScopus© Citations 1 5 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, 4 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, 17 2 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, Narrative and Family Business Firms: A Discourse Framework Toward Continuity and Competitiveness(2020); Family business firms (FBFs) constantly struggle with the challenge of successfully reaching and surviving beyond the third generation. Narrative or storytelling is frequently used in business to transmit knowledge, achieve goals, create and maintain a connection with stakeholders, and achieve sustained growth. Most FBFs consciously or unconsciously use narrative and possess their own discourse, which is unique to every family and family business and which may aid FBFs in achieving continuity. FBFs must have an adequate atmosphere of collaboration and cooperation so that group members can transform acquired tacit knowledge through storytelling into explicit action. FBFs should be prepared to help collaborators and other stakeholders build competencies since tacit knowledge transfer, through narrative, can aid in the solving of problems, enhance innovativeness, and improve strategic decision-making. Therefore, narrative may well aid FBFs in fulfilling their ultimate goal of continuity. The purpose of this chapter is to evaluate the potential influence of narrative on FBFs’ continuity and prevention of their precipitous expiration. This chapter contributes to previous literature that sheds light on the narrative implications of FBFs, and depicts FBFs’ narratives and the dynamics of their business objectives, as well as touches on the heterogeneous nature of each family business’ storyline. There are various advantages to FBFs’ storytelling; perhaps the most noteworthy is the achievement of sustained business growth and continuity. © 2020 Emerald Publishing Limited.Scopus© Citations 2 27 2 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
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Item type:Publication, Unresolved Issues: Quality of Life and Digitalization in Marginalized Communities(MDPI AG, 2026); ; Digitalization is a catalyst for the development of an information society, transforming how individuals interact with the world. However, its implementation across countries and regions has been uneven, contributing to social polarization and declining social trust. Among the most pressing concerns related to digitalization and inequality are the conditions of marginalized communities and persistent gender disparities. This study examines whether digitalization is associated with quality of life in marginalized areas and whether these effects differ between men and women. Using a quantitative approach, this study applies an ordinal regression model to data from two surveys conducted in 2021 and 2024 in a marginalized community in Mexico City. The results indicate that digitalization is significantly associated with quality of life: households possessing technological assets were 4.17 times more likely to report improvements in quality of life. Moreover, notable gender differences emerged. Although men’s quality of life increased by a factor of 35.7 in relation to digitalization, no statistically significant association was observed for women. The findings suggest a growing and statistically significant association between digitalization and quality of life in marginalized communities, but its benefits are distributed unevenly across genders. ©The authors ©MDPI.
