中文 | Nankai University

Quan LI

Quan LI
Associate Professor
Human Resource Management
Email:quan-li19@nankai.edu.cn
Tel:
中文
  • Biography

  • Research & Achievement

  • Projects

  • Teaching

Research Areas

leadership, ethical behavior


Education

2014-2019 Ph.D. in Leadership and Organizational Management, School of Economics and Management, Tsinghua University
2010-2014 B.S. in Human Resource Management, Business School, Nankai University


Professional Experience

2022- Associate Professor in Human Resource Management, Business School, Nankai University
2019-2022  Assistant Professor in Human Resource Management, Business School, Nankai University


Awards

2023 Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management Best Paper (Carlo Masini Award)


Social Service

Reviewers for:
Asia Pacific Journal of Marketing and Logistics、Current Psychology、Chinese Management Studies、Nankai Business Review International、International Journal of Hospitality and Tourism Administration


Peer-reviewed Journal Papers:
  1. Li, Q., Jiang, P., She, Z., & Ma, L. (2024). Too depleted to work? A daily study on how work-related ICT use after hours influences employee next-day work procrastination behavior. Work & Stress, forthcoming.
  2. She, Z., Ma, L., Li, Q., & Jiang, P. (2024). Help or hindrance? The effects of leader workaholism on employee creativity. Journal of Business Research, forthcoming.
  3. Lee-Kugler, T., Gu, J., Li, Q., Eva, N., & Mitchell, R. (2024). Will a moral follower please stand up (to the Machiavellian leader)? The effects of Machiavellian leadership on moral anger and whistleblowing. Journal of Business Ethics, DOI: 10.1007/s10551-024-05719-7.
  4. She, Z., & Li, Q. (2023). When too little or too much hurts: evidence for a curvilinear relationship between cyberloafing and task performance in public organizations. Journal of Business Ethics, 183(4), 1141-1158.
  5. Li, Q., She, Z., & Gu, J. (2022). Managerial coaching and employee knowledge sharing: A daily diary study. Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology, 95(4), 821-845.
  6. Zhang, M., Dou, J., Sharon, F., Margaret, S. A., Li, Q. (2022). The relationship between gender and work-to-family conflict among Chinese managers: Testing a moderated mediation model. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 33(12), 2541-2563. 
  7. She, Z., Li, Q., & Zhou, J. (2021). How CEO workaholism influences firm performance: The roles of collective organizational engagement and TMT power distance. Frontiers in Psychology, 9, 1-12. 
  8. She, Z., Li, Q., Yang, B., & Yang, B. (2020). Paradoxical leadership and hospitality employees’ service performance: The role of leader identification and need for cognitive closure. International Journal of Hospitality Management, 89, 1-11. 
  9. She, Z., Li, Q., London, M., Yang, B., & Yang, B. (2020). Effects of CEO narcissism on decision-making comprehensiveness and speed. Journal of Managerial Psychology, 35(1), 42-55.
  10. She, Z., Li, B., Li, Q., London, M., & Yang, B. (2019). The double-edged sword of coaching: Relationships between coaching and personal accomplishment and role overload. Human Resource Development Quarterly, 30(2), 245-266. 
  11. Li, Q., She, Z., & Yang, B. (2018). Promoting innovative performance in multidisciplinary teams: The roles of paradoxical leadership and team perspective taking. Frontiers in Psychology, 9, 1-12. 

Books and Chapters:
  1. Li, Q., & She, Z. (2020). The impact of workaholic leaders on followers’ informal field-based learning. In L. Manuel (Ed.), The oxford handbook of lifelong learning (Chapter 29). Oxford University Press.

Projects

2021-2023 Young Scientists Fund of National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC)

Teaching

human resource management, labor economics, research methodology