Huiyang Li

Huiyang Li
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Huiyang verified their affiliation via an institutional email.
Verified
Huiyang verified their affiliation via an institutional email.
  • Ph.D
  • Professor (Assistant) at Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University

About

7
Publications
583
Reads
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52
Citations
Introduction
Huiyang Li is an Assistant Professor at the Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University. He received his Ph.D. in Management from the Sun Yat-sen University. He studies the intersection of strategy and organizational theory, with a focus on topics such as corporate governance and strategic management, environmental economics and sustainable development, and family business management.
Current institution
Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University
Current position
  • Professor (Assistant)
Education
September 2020 - December 2024
Sun Yat-Sen University
Field of study
  • Corporate Governance and Strategic Management, Governance of Family Enterprises, Environmental Economy and Sustainable Development

Publications

Publications (7)
Article
Full-text available
Although current research has demonstrated that executive verbal communication could shape shareholders’ expectancy and responses, the hazards of executive communication and firms’ follow-up responses are largely neglected. Based on expectancy violation theory, we explore how different levels of managerial tone trigger a firm’s risk-taking to avoid...
Article
Although current research has demonstrated that executive verbal communication could shape shareholders’ expectancy and responses, hazards of executive communication and firms’ follow-up responses are largely neglected. Integrating expectancy violation theory with prospect theory, we explore how different levels of managerial tone trigger a firm’s...
Article
Full-text available
This paper constructs data from 30 provinces in mainland China from 1997 to 2016 and mainly adopts panel data fixed effects models to investigate how the promotion pressure on local officials affects regional carbon emissions. Our empirical results show that the relationship between the promotion pressure on local officials and regional carbon emis...
Article
In many emerging countries, firms face formal institutional voids that raise both the cost and the level of difficulty of business operations. In this study, we examine a unique culture-rooted mechanism that may address those voids, and this comes in the form of supply chain partner surname sharing based on the legacy of clan identification. Using...
Article
The expanding of market-oriented reforms (MORs) over the past 40 years has provided steady momentum for China’s rapid economic growth. Based on the balanced panel data of 28 Chinese provinces from 1985–2015, an empirical analysis using stochastic frontier analysis was conducted to examine the impacts of MORs on the evolution of China’s green econom...

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