Warren Wylupski
Graduate Student, Guest Lecturer, 
Organizational Consultant

Department of Sociology
University of New Mexico
1915 Roma NE
Albuquerque, NM 87131-1166
(505) 277-2501
Email: warrenw@unm.edu

 

 

ACADEMIC AND PROFESSIONAL PRESENTATIONS
ACADEMIC EMPLOYMENT
AFFILIATIONS
AWARDS_AND_RECOGNITION
CONSULTING INTERESTS
CURRENT_RESEARCH_INTERESTS
EDUCATION
JOURNALISM_ARTICLE
PAPERS UNDER REVIEW
PROFESSIONAL_EMPLOYMENT


AWARDS AND RECOGNITION
2001 Peter K. New Award, 3rd Place -
Society for Applied Anthropology's annual student research competition
The Peter K. New awards are given to the best papers that report on an applied research project in the social/behavioral sciences. The issue of research question is in the domain of health care or human services (broadly construed).
February 2002

2001 Up-and-Comer Award
Recognition for Partnering Business and Community Involvement in New Mexico
Presented by the University of New Mexico's Anderson Schools of Management
November 2001

 

ACADEMIC AND PROFESSIONAL PRESENTATIONS
Poster Presentation
Using Organizational Learning Theory to Investigate Recent Corporate Fraud. Presented at the University of New Mexico’s Department of Organizational Learning and Instructional Technologies Project Gallery April, 2003.

Rountable
Corporate Fraud: Using Organizational Learning Theory To Explain Recent Corporate Failures. Presided over session at University of New Mexico’s College of Education Colloquium, April 2003.

Presentation
Corporate Fraud: Using Organizational Learning Theory To Explain Recent Corporate Failures. Presented at the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, March 2003.

Presentation
Influencing the Quality of Police Service by Understanding How Police Attain Professional Status. Presented at the University of New Mexico's Anthropology Graduate Student Union Spring Symposium April 6th, 2002.

Discussant
Course: ADMJ 1403, Contemporary Issues in Courts, Policy and Justice, University of Pittsburgh – Bradford, PA
CourseWeb Blackboard Discussant
Spring 2002

Presentation
How Police Attain Professional Status. Presented at the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences Annual Meeting, Anaheim, CA, March 2002.

Moderator
Community Advisory Roundtable, Net-Impact - University of New Mexico
April 16, 2001

Presentation
Impact of Community Policing on Police Professionalization. Presented at the Pacific Sociological Association Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, March 2001.

Guest Lecture
Course: SOC 412 Police and Society, University of New Mexico
Topic: Police Subculture, Deviance, and Police Oversight
March 8, 2001

Guest Lecture
Course: SOC 412 Police and Society, University of New Mexico
Topic: Traditional Function of Police, and Police Patrol
January 23, 2001

Guest Lecture
Course: SOC 308 Social Problems, University of New Mexico
Topic: Social Responsibility in a Corporate Setting
December 5, 2000

Guest Lecture
Course: ADMJ 1303, Law Enforcement Operations, University of Pittsburgh – Bradford, PA
Topic: Impact of Community Policing on Police Professionalization
November 9, 2000

Moderator
Globalization of Commerce Debate/Panel, Net-Impact - University of New Mexico
September 18, 2000

Presentation
Joining the Club: The Social-Fitness of a Non-competitive, Leisure Bicycle Club. Presented at the Pacific Sociological Association Annual Meeting, San Diego, CA, March 2000.

Guest Lecture
Course : SOC 371 – Classical Social Theory, University of New Mexico
Topic: Alienation, Anomie, and its Contemporary Implications
February 9, 2000

 

EDUCATION
University of New Mexico, Certificate in Organizational Learning and Training   Fall 2003

University of New Mexico, MA, Sociology (Organizational Behavior)               2002
Thesis Title “How Police Attain Professional Status” 2002.

Rochester Institute of Technology, MBA, Finance                                             1989

State University of New York at Buffalo, BS, Finance/ M.I.S.                           1987

 

JOURNALISM ARTICLE
"Professor says community is answer to crime," UNM Daily Lobo, March 2, 2001.

 

PAPERS UNDER REVIEW
Wylupski, W.  Business Plan Workbook. Unpublished Manuscript.

 

AFFILIATIONS
American Evaluation Association, 2003 to Present
National White Collar Crime Center, White Collar Crime Research Consortium, 2003 to Present
Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, 2002 to Present
American Sociologic Association, 1999 to 2002
Pacific Sociological Association, 2000 to 2002
Southwestern Social Science Association, 1999 to 2001
Albuquerque Management Consultants Roundtable, 2000 to Present

 

ACADEMIC EMPLOYMENT
Graduate Assistant - Sociology of Deviance, 1999 to 2000

 

PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYMENT
Over twelve years experience in financial accounting, financial operations, effective business processes, and business and employee goals.
Please contact me if you would like additional information in this area.

 

CURRENT RESEARCH INTERESTS
Sociology of Organizations
Criminology
Sociology of Work
Police Operations and Ethics

 

CONSULTING INTERESTS
Program Evaluation
Organizational Learning
Organizational Commitment
Employee Development
Corporate Culture

 


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