Abstract

The authors investigated publications from dissertation research at nontraditional institutions. Results revealed that 7.1% of dissertations written at nontraditional institutions were published, whereas 18.4% of dissertations written at traditional institutions were published. In total, 11.2% of graduates of nontraditional doctoral programs and 43.9% of graduates of traditional doctoral programs eventually published at least once. There was no significant difference between the publication output of nontraditional graduates and that of two thirds of graduates from traditional and Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business-International accredited programs. The authors discuss implications of their results.

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