Doug Guthrie
Doug Guthrie is an American academic administrator, sociologist, and China scholar. He is currently Professor of Global Leadership and Executive Director of China Initiatives at the Thunderbird School of Global Management at Arizona State University. He was previously Faculty Member of Apple University in China at Apple, Dean of The George Washington University School of Business, and Professor of Management and Sociology and Director of Executive Education and NYU's Stern School of Business. He has also worked as a visiting Professor of Management at the business schools of Columbia, Stanford, Harvard, Emory, and INSEAD and as director of the Business Institutions Initiative at the Social Science Research Council.
Biography
Guthrie earned a PhD from the University of California, Berkeley, and he was awarded an American Sociological Association award for best dissertation in 1997.Guthrie's academic career began in 1997, as a professor of sociology at New York University. After receiving tenure in 2000, Guthrie spent time at a variety of business schools including Columbia, Harvard, Stanford, Emory, and INSEAD. Upon returning to NYU in 2005, Guthrie took up an appointment as Professor of Management and Director of Custom Executive Education at NYU's Stern School of Business. In the Summer of 2010, he was named Dean of the George Washington University School of Business. He stepped down from the Deanship and his university position as vice president for China operations in August 2013. The university cited "fundamental differences about financial and operational performance" as a reason for his departure, namely, the School of Business' overspending by $13 million in the preceding year under his leadership.
In 2014, Apple hired Guthrie to lead Apple University's leadership development work in China and advise on the company's operations in China. He left the company in 2019.
Books
Politics and Partnerships: The Transformation of the Nonprofit Sector in the Era of the Declining Welfare State. Co-edited with Elisabeth S. Clemens.China and Globalization: The Social, Economic, and Political Transformation of Chinese Society, 3rd ed..China and Globalization: The Social, Economic, and Political Transformation of Chinese Society, 2nd ed..China and Globalization: The Social, Economic, and Political Transformation of Chinese Society, 1st ed..Social Connections in China: Institutions, Culture, and the Changing Nature of Guanxi. Co-edited with Thomas Gold and David Wank.Dragon in a Three-Piece Suit: The Emergence of Capitalism in China..Articles (selected)
- “China’s Political Regime and Economic System: Corporate Governance in Today’s China.” Handbook on Corporate Governance in China, edited by Martin Conyon and Lerong He.
- “Economic Openness and Institutional Embeddedness: Global Capital and Firm Performance in China’s Stock Market.” Social Science Quarterly. Vol. 99 : 807-828.
- “Stability, Asset Management, and Gradual Change in China’s Reform Economy.” In China’s State Capitalism: State Capitalism, Institutional Adaptation, and the Chinese Miracle, edited by Barry Naughton and Kellee Tsai, pp. 75–101. New York: Cambridge University Press.
- “The Rise and Effects of State-Owned Asset Management Companies in China.” Chinese Management Insights.
- “China and Individualism.” Routledge Handbook of China’s Governance and Domestic Politics.
- “Messy Details: Ownership Networks and New Institutional Forms in Transitions from Plan to Market.” In The Small Worlds of Corporate Governance, edited by Bruce Kogut. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
- “The Rise of SASAC: Asset Management, Ownership Concentration, and Firm Performance in China’s Capital Markets.” Management and Organization Review.
- Guthrie, Doug. “Innovation in the Chinese Mode.” Science vol. 333.
- Marquis, Christopher, Doug Guthrie, and John Almandoz. “Corporate Responsibility, State Activism and the Hidden Incentives behind Bank Mergers, 1990-2000: Tax Credits, the Community Reinvestment Act, and Economic Change.” Social Science Research 41: 130-45.
- “Communities, Labor, and the Law: The Rise of Corporate Social Responsibility in the United States.” Research in the Sociology of Organizations 33:143-73.
- Clemens, Elisabeth and Doug Guthrie. “Politics and Partnerships: The Role of Voluntary Associations in America’s Political Past and Present.” In Politics and Partnerships: The Transformation of the Nonprofit Sector in the Era of the Declining Welfare State. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
- “Corporate Philanthropy in the United States: Where do Corporations Place their Bets?” In Politics and Partnerships: The Transformation of the Nonprofit Sector in the Era of the Declining Welfare State. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
- “Inefficient Deregulation and the Global Economic Crisis: The United States and China Compared.” Research in the Sociology of Organizations 30B: 283–312.
- “Work and Productivity in Reform-Era China.” Research in the Sociology of Work 19: 35–73.
- “Social Enterprise and Social Entrepreneurship: Institutional Innovation and Social Change.” European Management Review: 1–13.
- “Corporate Investment, Social Innovation, and Community Change: The Local Political Economy of Low-Income Housing Development.” City and Community 7: 113–40.
- “Giving to Local Schools: Corporate Philanthropy and the Receding Welfare State.” Social Science Research 974: 1–18.
- “Privatization and the Social Contract: Corporate Welfare and Low-Income Housing in the United States since 1986.” Research in Political Sociology 14: 15–51.
- “Organizational Learning and Productivity: State Structure and Foreign Investment in the Rise of the Chinese Corporation.” Management and Organization Review 1: 165–95.
- “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 : 34–44.
- “The Quiet Revolution: The Emergence of Capitalism in China,” Harvard International Review 25: 48–53.
- “The Transformation of Labor Relations in China’s Emerging Market Economy.” Research in Social Stratification and Mobility 19: 137–68.
- “Understanding China’s Transition to Capitalism: The Contributions of Victor Nee and Andrew Walder.” Sociological Forum 15: 725–47.
- “The State, Courts, and Equal Opportunities for Female CEOs in U.S. Organizations: Specifying Institutional Mechanisms.” Social Forces 78: 511–42.
- “The State, Courts, and Maternity Leave Policies in U.S. Organizations: Specifying Institutional Mechanisms.” American Sociological Review 64: 41–63.
- “The Declining Significance of Guanxi in China’s Economic Transition.” The China Quarterly 154: 31–62.
- “Between Markets and Politics: Organizational Responses to Reform in China.” American Journal of Sociology 102: 1258–1303.