User:Doug Guthrie

Doug Guthrie is dean of the School of Business at The George Washington University[1] in Washington D.C. Prior to taking over as dean of GWSB[2], he was professor of management and sociology at New York University[3], holding joint appointments in the Stern School of Business[4] and NYU’s Faculty of Arts and Sciences[5]. His areas of expertise lie in the fields of leadership and organizational change, corporate governance and corporate social responsibility, and economic reform in China. He has published widely in these fields, though he is probably best known for his work on China. He has taught as a visiting professor at Harvard Business School[6], INSEAD[7], and the Graduate Schools of Business at Stanford University[8], Columbia University[9], and Emory University[10]. He was director of the Business Institutions Initiative (1999-2003) at the Social Science Research Council[11]. He has also been deeply involved in executive education, previously holding positions as the director of Custom Executive Education at NYU-Stern and as the executive academic director of the Berlin School of Creative Leadership[12].

Biography
Guthrie was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in 1969, where he attended Taylor Allderdice High School[13]. He received his AB Degree in East Asian Languages and Civilizations (concentration in Chinese literature) from the University of Chicago[13] in 1992. During his time at Chicago, he left school for a year to study Mandarin in Taipei, Taiwan. Immediately following graduation from Chicago, he went on to study organizational and economic sociology at the University of California Berkeley under Neil Fligstein[] and Thomas Gold[]. A Social Science Research Council Grant allowed him to study in Berkeley’s Economics Department and then to go on to conduct his dissertation research in Shanghai. There he conducted a study of 81 factories in industrial Shanghai. His dissertation was awarded the American Sociological Association’s[14] annual award for the best dissertation in the discipline (calendar year 1997) and eventually formed the basis for the book Dragon in a Three Piece Suit: The Emergence of Capitalism in China (Princeton 1999).

Guthrie’s first academic appointment began at New York University’s Department of Sociology[] in 1997. Upon receiving tenure in 2000, Guthrie embarked on a string of other, short-term appointments to explore different ways to engage the business community more directly. From 1999-2003 Guthrie was director of the Business Institutions Initiative and the Program on the Corporation as a Social Institution at the Social Science Research Council. In building this program, Guthrie received grants from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation[15] and the Ford Foundation[16] to support research and field development in the areas of economic sociology, study of the corporation as a social institution, and corporate social responsibility. From 2001-06, he served as a visiting professor at Columbia Business School[17], Stanford Business School[18], the Goizueta Business School at Emory[19], INSEAD[20], and Harvard Business School[21]. In 2006, he returned NYU-Stern School of Business to take the position of professor of management (with a joint appointment as professor of sociology on the Faculty of Arts and Sciences). He also took up the post as director of executive education at Stern. In 2008, Guthrie began his relationship with the Berlin School of Creative Leadership, an Executive MBA school for executives in the creative industries, where he served as executive academic director. In the Summer of 2010, he was named Dean of the Graduate School of Business at the George Washington University.

Publications
Books Dragon in a Three-Piece Suit: The Emergence of Capitalism in China. (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1999).
 * Politics and Partnerships: The Transformation of the Nonprofit Sector in the Era of the Declining Welfare State. Co-edited with Elisabeth Clemens (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2010).
 * China and Globalization: The Social, Economic, and Political Transformation of Chinese Society, Revised Edition. (New York: Routledge, 2009).
 * China and Globalization: The Social, Economic, and Political Transformation of Chinese Society [First Edition]. (New York: Routledge, 2006).
 * Social Connections in China: Institutions, Culture, and the Changing Nature of Guanxi. Co-edited with Thomas Gold and David Wank (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2001).

Articles (Selected)
 * “Inefficient Deregulation and the Global Economic Crisis: The United States and China Compared.” (Special Edition: Markets on Trial: The Economic Sociology of the US Financial Crisis, Edited by Michael Loundsbury and Paul M. Hirsch.) Research in the Sociology of Organizations 30B: 283-312. (With David Slocum, 2010)
 * “Work and Productivity in Reform-Era China.” Research in the Sociology of Work 19: 35-73. (With Zhixing Xiao, and Junmin Wang, 2009)
 * “Social Enterprise and Social Entrepreneurship: Institutional Innovation and Social Change.” European Management Review: 1-13. (With Rodolphe Durand 2008)
 * “Corporate Investment, Social Innovation, and Community Change: The Local Political Economy of Low-Income Housing Development.” City and Community 7(2): 113-40. (With Michael McQuarrie, 2008)
 * “Giving to Local Schools: Corporate Philanthropy and the Receding Welfare State.” Social Science Research 974: 1-18. (With Richard Arum, Josipa Roksa, and Sarah Damaske, 2007)
 * “Privatization and the Social Contract: Corporate Welfare and Low-Income Housing in the United States since 1986.” Research in Political Sociology 14: 15-51. (With Michael McQuarrie, 2005)
 * “Organizational Learning and Productivity: State Structure and Foreign Investment in the Rise of the Chinese Corporation.” Management and Organization Review 1(2): 165-95. (2005)
 * “An Accidental Good: How Savvy Social Entrepreneurs Seized on a Tax Loophole to Raise Billions of Corporate Dollars for Affordable Housing.” Stanford Social Innovation Review (Fall): 34-44. (2004)
 * “The Quiet Revolution: The Emergence of Capitalism in China,” Harvard International Review 25(2): 48-53. (2003)
 * “The Transformation of Labor Relations in China’s Emerging Market Economy.” Research in Social Stratification and Mobility 19: 137-68. (2002)
 * “Understanding China’s Transition to Capitalism: The Contributions of Victor Nee and Andrew Walder.” Sociological Forum 15(4): 725-47. (2000)
 * “The State, Courts, and Equal Opportunities for Female CEOs in U.S. Organizations: Specifying Institutional Mechanisms.” Social Forces 78(2): 511-42. (With Louise Roth 1999)
 * “The State, Courts, and Maternity Leave Policies in U.S. Organizations: Specifying Institutional Mechanisms.” American Sociological Review 64(1): 41-63. (With Louise Roth 1999)
 * “The Declining Significance of Guanxi in China’s Economic Transition.” The China Quarterly 154: 31-62. (1998)
 * “Between Markets and Politics: Organizational Responses to Reform in China.” American Journal of Sociology 102: 1258-1303. (1997)

References (web)