Research Seminar: Associate Professor Pingshu Li
Title: ESG Performance and Capital Market Survival: Evidence from Foreign Firms’ Title: This Ain’t My First Rodeo: How Past and Current Negative Event Experience Jointly Affect Employee Turnover Intentions
Abstract: Recent event-oriented research has demonstrated that events can influence many different psychological processes and outcomes. Importantly, this research has focused on the impact of single events in isolation, even though there is considerable reason to believe that multiple events might act in concert to affect outcomes. We adopt a multiple-event approach and link employee experience from a past negative event to a current negative event. In doing so, we argue that past negative event experience can mitigate the negative effect of current event disruption on employee outcomes. More specifically, building from job demands-control theory, we propose that job overload mediates the current event disruption and turnover intentions relationship. Shared employee past negative event experience, individual adaptivity, and unit collective resilience positively moderate this mediated relationship. We explore these relationships in two field studies and found (in study 1) that shared past negative event experience mitigated the negative effect of current event disruption on employee turnover intentions. Based on these findings, we designed study 2 to further investigate the proposed mediating and moderating mechanisms, finding additional support for our hypotheses. These findings extend the event-oriented theories and research and have important implications for management practice.
Bio: Dr. Pingshu Li is an associate professor of Management at the Robert C. Vackar College of Business and Entrepreneurship, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley. He received his PhD degree in human resource management and Organizational Behavior from the University of Kansas. His research interests include strategic human resource management and human capital, prosocial motivation and employee turnover. He has published in journals such as Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, Human Resource Management, and Human Resource Management Journal, among others. His research has received best paper awards from multiple conferences, including Best Convention Paper and Best Student Paper from the HR Division, Academy of Management conference. He currently serves as an associate editor of Journal of Business Research.
Note: Tea/coffee and sandwiches will be served between 12-1pm at room 419.
Photographs will be taken during this seminar and may be shared on social media. If you do not wish to appear, please notify tbs.research@tcd.ie.