Dinesh Hasija, PhD
Assistant Professor in the James M. Hull College of Business Augusta University
- Augusta GA
Social
Areas of Expertise
Accomplishments
Supply Chain Management Research Center Fellowship
2020 Sam M. Walton College of Business, University of Arkansas
Research Scholarship & Creative Activity Program (RSCA)
2021 Augusta University
Experiential Innovation Fund (EIF) Grant
2022 Instruction and Innovation - Office of the Vice Provost
Research Scholarship & Creative Activity Program (RSCA)
2022 Augusta University
Best Track Paper Award
2024 Eastern Academy of Management
Education
University of Arkansas
Ph.D.
Business Administration, Management and Opera
2019
Florida International University
M.A.
International Business/Trade/Commerce
2013
Valdosta State University
BBA
Business, Management, Marketing, and Related Support Services, Other
2010
Media Appearances
With Bret Taylor’s departure from Salesforce, just 7 companies in the Fortune 500 have a co-CEO
Fortune online
2022-12-02
Governance experts hold mixed opinions about the structure, one that’s more common in family-owned and private firms than in listed companies. The dual-leader system is a tradition in private equity, but only about 4% of public companies have two chiefs, according to Dinesh Hasija, assistant professor of management at Augusta University’s James M. Hull College of Business.
Bret Taylor’s surprise exit from Salesforce isn’t proof the co-CEO model doesn’t work. But it requires the right conditions
Fortune online
2022-12-02
“Even though they are two CEOs, in reality, we all know that a cofounder is much more powerful than the incoming CEO,” says Dinesh Hasija, assistant professor of management at Augusta University’s James M. Hull College of Business. Co-CEOs need equal footing to be sustainable, he explains. At Salesforce, Benioff had the final say by design, according to The Information.
New study shows congressional stock purchases may impact stock market reactions
Augusta University News online
2022-10-18
A recent study co-authored by Dinesh Hasija, PhD, assistant professor of management in the Hull College of Business at Augusta University, suggests stock market investments by congressional representatives can influence the market’s volatility.
Nancy Pelosi Is Wrong About Trading Stocks in Congress
New York Magazine online
2021-12-15
“Investors perceive that senators may have insider information,” Dinesh Hasija, an assistant professor of strategic management at Augusta University, told NPR in September. “And we see abnormal positive returns when there’s a disclosure by a senator.”
Articles
A Process Model of Board Characteristics and Firm Financial Performance: A Meta‐Analytic Structural Equation Modeling Approach
Corporate Governance: An International Review2026
Diversity and Team Performance: Evidence from the Indian Premier League
American Behavioral Scientist2025
New sheriff in town: A quad model approach to examining the consequences of selecting a qualified lead independent directors
Strategic Management Journal2025
Indirect corporate political strategy in cross-border acquisitions: influence of political affinity on target-dependent firm lobbying
Multinational Business Review2025
Who obtains political exemptions? An attention-based analysis of steel tariff exclusion requests
Journal of International Business Policy2024


