Whistleblowing ImpactHomeAboutNews & EventsTopicsShow search boxSearch textSearch MENUBreadcrumbsHomeAboutThe Research TeamAboutThe Research TeamWe are a team of academics from the University of Galway, Warwick Business School, University of Greenwich Business School, and University College Cork, and a policy researcher from the Centre for Health and Public Interest. Professor Kate KennyUniversity of Galway, Whitaker Institute and J.E. Cairnes School of Business and EconomicsKate Kenny is Professor in Business and Society at University of Galway, J.E Cairnes School of Business and Economics, Ireland. She has a B. Eng in Civil Engineering and a Phd from Cambridge University’s Judge Business School. Kate has held fellowships at the Edmond J. Safra Lab at Harvard University and Judge Business School. Kate has been researching whistleblowing and organizations for ten years, with projects funded by ESRC, British Academy, and Leverhulme Trust.Web EmailLinkedInProfessor Marianna FotakiWarwick Business School, University of WarwickMarianna Fotaki is Professor of Business Ethics at University of Warwick Business School. She has a PhD from the London School of Economics and Political Science and was also an Edmond J. Safra Network Fellow (2014–2015) at Harvard University. Currently Marianna works on ESRC and British Academy/Leverhulme funded research on whistleblowing and corruption and conducts pilot projects on solidarity responses to refugee arrivals in Greece.Web EmailLinkedInProfessor Wim VandekerckhoveUniversity of Greenwich Business SchoolWim Vandekerckhove is a Reader in Business Ethics at the University of Greenwich. He has provided expertise on whistleblowing to various organisations, including Transparency International, Public Concern at Work, the Whistleblower Advice Centre in the Netherlands, the UK Department of Health, the Council of Europe, and the British Standards Institute.Web EmailLinkedInDr Didem Derya Özdemir KayaWarwick Business SchoolDidem Derya Özdemir Kaya is a research fellow and associate lecturer at the OHRM division of Warwick Business School. She completed her PhD at the same institution in October 2019. Her research interests are affective labour and post-Fordist work. She draws on psychosocial, feminist and Marxist theories in her research. She has held research posts in teams investigating whistleblowing and domestic abuse.Web EmailTwitterDr Meghan Van PortflietUniversity College CorkMeghan Van Portfliet is a Lecturer in Management at Cork University Business School and an Associate Member of the Whitaker Institute, NUI Galway. Her research is focused on how whistleblowers can successfully come through their journey, looking at the support of advocacy organizations and how these can shape the journey. She has published her work in journals such as the Journal of Business Ethics and Organization.Dr Muhammad IrfanManagement Discipline and Whitaker Institute, University of GalwayMuhammad Irfan is an Employee Engagement & Voice Advisor for the Ministry of Health, B.C. Public Service, Canada. He has been involved in research and consultancy projects focusing on whistleblowing, employee voice, work culture, and effective leadership. He holds a PhD in Management from the University of Galway. Muhammad has experience across various industries, including higher education, tech startups, oil and gas, manufacturing, and the public sector.Bashir AlaoPhD candidate, J.E Cairnes School of Business and Economics, University of Galway.Bashir Alao is currently a PhD student at the J.E Cairnes School of Business and Economics, University of Galway. His research project is on whistleblowing systems, laws, ethics, and behavior and their impacts on corruption, fraud, and organization wrongdoing. He is working on a comparative study of Ireland and Nigeria. He is an experienced auditor and compliance expert and has authored and co-authored over ten research articles in the areas of corporate accountability, whistleblowing, auditing, and ethics.Iain MunroIain Munro is Professor of Leadership and Organization at Newcastle Business School. He has previously worked at the universities of Warwick (1994-2000), St Andrews (2000-2009), and Innsbruck (2009-2013). He has research interests in whistleblowing and human rights, and more broadly in ethics and power in organizations. The Research TeamFunders & PartnersTestimonialsContactGet in TouchWe regularly support and consult with organisations involved in supporting whistleblowing internationally.Get in touch with the research team.If you would like information of other free and practical whistleblowing resources, please email us.
We are a team of academics from the University of Galway, Warwick Business School, University of Greenwich Business School, and University College Cork, and a policy researcher from the Centre for Health and Public Interest.
Kate Kenny is Professor in Business and Society at University of Galway, J.E Cairnes School of Business and Economics, Ireland. She has a B. Eng in Civil Engineering and a Phd from Cambridge University’s Judge Business School. Kate has held fellowships at the Edmond J. Safra Lab at Harvard University and Judge Business School. Kate has been researching whistleblowing and organizations for ten years, with projects funded by ESRC, British Academy, and Leverhulme Trust.
Marianna Fotaki is Professor of Business Ethics at University of Warwick Business School. She has a PhD from the London School of Economics and Political Science and was also an Edmond J. Safra Network Fellow (2014–2015) at Harvard University. Currently Marianna works on ESRC and British Academy/Leverhulme funded research on whistleblowing and corruption and conducts pilot projects on solidarity responses to refugee arrivals in Greece.
Wim Vandekerckhove is a Reader in Business Ethics at the University of Greenwich. He has provided expertise on whistleblowing to various organisations, including Transparency International, Public Concern at Work, the Whistleblower Advice Centre in the Netherlands, the UK Department of Health, the Council of Europe, and the British Standards Institute.
Didem Derya Özdemir Kaya is a research fellow and associate lecturer at the OHRM division of Warwick Business School. She completed her PhD at the same institution in October 2019. Her research interests are affective labour and post-Fordist work. She draws on psychosocial, feminist and Marxist theories in her research. She has held research posts in teams investigating whistleblowing and domestic abuse.
Meghan Van Portfliet is a Lecturer in Management at Cork University Business School and an Associate Member of the Whitaker Institute, NUI Galway. Her research is focused on how whistleblowers can successfully come through their journey, looking at the support of advocacy organizations and how these can shape the journey. She has published her work in journals such as the Journal of Business Ethics and Organization.
Muhammad Irfan is an Employee Engagement & Voice Advisor for the Ministry of Health, B.C. Public Service, Canada. He has been involved in research and consultancy projects focusing on whistleblowing, employee voice, work culture, and effective leadership. He holds a PhD in Management from the University of Galway. Muhammad has experience across various industries, including higher education, tech startups, oil and gas, manufacturing, and the public sector.
Bashir Alao is currently a PhD student at the J.E Cairnes School of Business and Economics, University of Galway. His research project is on whistleblowing systems, laws, ethics, and behavior and their impacts on corruption, fraud, and organization wrongdoing. He is working on a comparative study of Ireland and Nigeria. He is an experienced auditor and compliance expert and has authored and co-authored over ten research articles in the areas of corporate accountability, whistleblowing, auditing, and ethics.
Iain Munro is Professor of Leadership and Organization at Newcastle Business School. He has previously worked at the universities of Warwick (1994-2000), St Andrews (2000-2009), and Innsbruck (2009-2013). He has research interests in whistleblowing and human rights, and more broadly in ethics and power in organizations.
We regularly support and consult with organisations involved in supporting whistleblowing internationally.
Get in touch with the research team.
If you would like information of other free and practical whistleblowing resources, please email us.