Shan Wang, Ph.D. profile photo

Shan Wang, Ph.D.

Associate Professor of Accounting, College of Business Administration

  • Los Angeles CA UNITED STATES
Contact

Biography

You can contact Shan Wang at shan.wang@lmu.edu.

Shan Wang is an Associate Professor of Accounting at Loyola Marymount University (LMU). She received her Ph.D. in Accounting from the University of Oregon in 2015 and has been with LMU since then.

Shan adopts a multidisciplinary perspective at the intersection of accounting and management to examine how executive human capital, top management teams, and boards of directors shape corporate decision-making across different institutional contexts. Her research focuses particularly on decisions under uncertainty, including corporate reporting and disclosure, tax planning, and green innovation. Her work has been published in leading academic journals, including Journal of Management Accounting Research, Journal of Accounting and Public Policy, Accounting Horizons, and Journal of Organizational Behavior. In addition to her academic research, she also translates her insights to inform managerial decision-making and practice, including work in California Management Review.

Shan has extensive teaching experience at both the University of Oregon and LMU. Her teaching focuses on management accounting, with an emphasis on data analytics. At LMU, she developed the first data analytics courses for both the MSA program (Accounting Analytics for Decision Making, Spring 2020) and the undergraduate accounting program (Strategic & Managerial Analysis, Fall 2021), as well as a doctoral-level research seminar for the inaugural DBA program (Fall 2024).

Education

University of Oregon

Ph.D.

Accounting

2015

Areas of Expertise

Corporate Governance
Corporate Reporting and Disclosures
Executive and Director Labor Markets
Taxation

Industry Expertise

Accounting
Research
Education/Learning

Articles

When Does Top Management Team Diversity Matter in Large Organizations?

Journal of Organizational Behavior

2025-10-09

Top management teams drive strategic leadership, but there is little clarity on when the composition of these upper echelons most impacts organizational performance. Drawing on the categorization-elaboration model, we study an 18-year sample of approximately 4,500 organizations and over 32,000 executives, and find a positive relationship between TMT functional diversity and organizational performance, but only for smaller organizations.

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The Effects of Top Management Team Age Diversity During a Crisis: Evidence from the COVID-19 Pandemic

Journal of Management Accounting Research

2024-07-25

This paper studies the impact of top management team (TMT) age diversity on firm performance during the COVID-19 pandemic.

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Top Management Team Functional Diversity and Management Forecast Accuracy

Accounting Horizons

2023-09-01

I examine whether TMT between-member and within-member functional diversity affects management earnings forecast accuracy.

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