Lisa LaViers

Assistant Professor

New Orleans
LA
US
A. B. Freeman School Of Business
Lisa LaViers

Biography

Lisa LaViers' research focuses on the intersection of managerial and financial accounting. She uses archival, field, and experimental methods and considers her use of mixed methods a strength of her research portfolio. One stream of her research examines human capital management disclosures like the CEO pay ratio disclosures and diversity disclosures. Her coauthors and her examine the effects of these disclosures on not only investors, but also, employees, and labor market participants. Another stream of Dr. LaViers' research examines how firms reward creative ideas. Her coauthors and her examine how firms can encourage employees to share more of their ideas with their managers and how the reward system can affect the quality and nature of the ideas employees choose to share.

Her work has been published in the Journal of Accounting Research and The Review of Accounting Studies. She has presented her work around the world at locations like: The Securities and Exchange Commission's Office of the Investor Advocate, SunTrust Bank, Cornell University, Indiana University, University of British Columbia, and The JAR Registered Reports Conference. In addition she has been award grants by organizations like: Institute of Management Accountants, The Center for Growth and Opportunity, and The Carol Lavin Bernick Faculty Grant.

She joined the Freeman School from Emory University, where she completed her PhD in accounting and her Bachelors degree in Economics. Prior to pursuing her doctoral studies, LaViers spent several years doing neuroeconomic research at the Center for Neuropolicy on how the brain trades off moral values and financial gain.

Education

Emory University

Doctor of Philosophy
Accounting
2018

Emory University

Bachelor of Arts
Economics
2011

Media Appearances

CEOs' pay climbed before layoffs at tech giants like Alphabet and Microsoft, data shows

ABC News
tv

"Especially in tech, I think it's a shock to tech workers who have always been in such high demand to be experiencing these layoffs," Lisa LaViers, a professor at Tulane University's Freeman School of Business who studies executive pay and its effect on workers, told ABC News.

Does It Help to Know How Much the Boss Makes?

The New York Times
online

The people who learned the most were not people working at the companies, but outside observers. “It was news to investors because investors didn’t have their own pay to make a ratio of,” said Lisa LaViers, an assistant professor at Tulane University’s Freeman School of Business who has studied how disclosing the pay gap affects workers. But, she said, “This is not informative in the same way to employees.”

Publications

Audio/Podcasts