ARTICLES TO BE DISCUSSED
The
rise of techno-geopolitical uncertainty: Implications of the United States CHIPS and Science Act
Yadong Luo, Ari Van Assche
The
influence of societal nationalist sentiment on trade flows
Douglas Dow, Ilya R. P. Cuypers
U.S.
national security and de-globalization
David Godsell, Ugur Lel, Darius Miller
PANELISTS
Ilya Cuypers is currently an Associate
Professor at the Lee Kong Chian School of Business at Singapore Management University, and received his Ph.D. from Tilburg University, the Netherlands. His work falls in the areas of international business and strategic management. He is currently serving
as Senior Editor for the Journal of World Business, and
he is a former Associate Editor of the Academy of Management Journal and
Guest Editor of the Journal of International Business Studies.
His work has been published in such journals as the Journal of International Business Studies, Journal of International Business Policy, Academy
of Management Journal, Strategic Management Journal, and Organization Science, and his current research focuses on the governance, dynamics, and
performance implications of cross-border external corporate development activities (e.g., alliances and acquisitions), investment decisions under uncertainty, and geopolitical issues such as nationalism.
Darius Miller is the Caruth chair
in finance at Southern Methodist University (SMU), Cox School of Business, where he conducts research in financial market regulation, corporate governance, and financial disclosure. His research is featured in the leading finance, accounting, and economics
journals, including the Journal of Finance, Journal
of Financial Economics, Review of
Financial Studies, Journal of Accounting
Research, and the Journal of International
Economics. His research has received awards such as the Journal
of Financial Economics “All Star Paper Award” for research impact. He has won the Cox “MBA Outstanding Teaching Award” six times, the Cox “Executive
MBA Teacher of the Year”, and the SMU “President’s Associates Outstanding Faculty Award”. Additionally, he was inducted into SMU’s Academy of Distinguished Teachers. Professor Miller previously held appointments at Indiana University and Texas A&M University.
He also has been a visiting professor/scholar at the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, Universidad de los Andes, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hanken School of Economics, and Wuhan University.
Ari Van Assche is full professor
in international business and director of the International Institute of Economic Diplomacy at HEC Montreal. He is the Incoming Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of International Business Policy and Fellow of AIB. He holds a BA and an MA in Chinese Studies from
the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven and a PhD in Economics from the University of Hawaii at Manoa. He specializes in the organization of global value chains and their implication for public policy. On this topic, he has published widely in academic journals
and has consulted for various Canadian and international governmental organizations including Global Affairs Canada, Transport Canada, the Asian Development Bank and the World Bank.
MODERATORS
Stephanie Lu Wang is Samuel & Pauline
Glaubinger Professor & Associate Chair at the Department of Management and Entrepreneurship, Kelley School of Business, Indiana University. Stephanie’s primary research interests lie at the intersection of internationalization and social/environmental sustainability.
She is particularly interested in studying emerging market multinationals and cultural industries as research contexts. Stephanie serves as an Associate Editor for the Global
Strategy Journal, an Associate Editor for the Business
Horizons, a Special Issue Editor for the
Journal of International Business Studies, a Consulting Editor for the Journal
of International Management. She is the Research Director of Women in the Academy of International Business (WAIB) and faculty advisor for the Indiana
University Chapter of Ascend. Stephanie received her Ph.D. from the University of Miami, a master’s degree from Peking University, and an undergraduate degree from the Renmin University of China.
Klaus Meyer (PhD, London Business
School) has been a Professor of International Business at Ivey Business School since 2017. He previously served as professor at China Europe International Business School, University of Bath, University of Reading and Copenhagen Business School, and held various
leadership roles at these institutions. His research focuses on the strategies of multinational enterprises (MNEs) in emerging economies. He published over 100 articles in leading scholarly journals and eight books, including the textbook ‘International Business’.
He is a Fellow of the Academy of International Business, former area editor of JIBS, and recipient of the JIBS Decade award.
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