Usha Haley — WSU Center for International Business Advancement

January 27, 2025

Chinese Investments , U.S. Energy and Green Technology: Implications for Business and Society 

How have Chinese investments in U.S. shale gas shaped technological advancements within the sector? Has the rise in regulation been a boon or a hindrance? What are the broader implications for businesses, society, and national security? Usha Haley will delve into these critical questions, presenting the findings of her latest research, supported by funding from the National Science Foundation.

 

Usha Haley is W. Frank Barton Distinguished Chair in International Business & Kansas Faculty of Distinction; and, Professor of Management (with tenure), Wichita State University. She is Director, Center for International Business Advancement & Chair, World Trade Council of Wichita. She has lived and worked on 5 continents. She researches multinational corporations and international strategic management, especially in Asian and emerging markets, including business-government relations, innovation, technology development, strategic decision-making, sanctions and subsidies, and the impact of scholarly research, with over 400 publications/presentations in these areas. Her research has been directly incorporated into federal regulation around the world, and she has provided numerous Congressional testimonies: e.g., she testified before the US Senate on Shuanghui’s takeover of Smithfield Foods, considered the most important case on FDI in a decade; she also testified on federal legislation, the Non-market Economy Trade Remedy Act whose findings were incorporated into US regulation (HR 1229). Her research on Chinese subsidies has supported 3 pieces of anti-dumping regulation in the European Commission. Competitive research grants she received include from the National Science Foundation for international technology development; Academy of Management for a strategic initiative on scholarly impact; USCC; the National Research Center for Coal & Energy; and, WVU Research, Global Affairs and Energy for reliable, global supply chains. She serves on several journal, corporate, non-profit and governmental advisory boards. Her research has been profiled over 600 times in the international media including multiple times in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, Times of London, USA Today, Businessweek, Guardian, CNN, Economist, Washington Post, PBS, and NPR. Her numerous awards include the Academy of Management’s Practice Impact Award for scholarly impact and Economist’s “thought leader” on emerging markets. Her PhD is from the Stern School of Business, NYU.

Round & Rounds

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