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Shenggang Ren

Researcher at Central South University

Publications -  14
Citations -  1464

Shenggang Ren is an academic researcher from Central South University. The author has contributed to research in topics: China & Biology. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 9 publications receiving 685 citations.

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The effects of three types of environmental regulation on eco-efficiency: A cross-region analysis in China

TL;DR: Zhang et al. as mentioned in this paper divided environmental regulation into three types: command-and-control regulation, market-based regulation and voluntary regulation, and employed the STIRPAT model to test the effects of these three environmental regulations on eco-efficiency in the eastern, central and western regions of China.
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The impact of legitimacy pressure and corporate profitability on green innovation: Evidence from China top 100

TL;DR: Li et al. as mentioned in this paper explored the influence of external legitimacy pressure and internal corporate profitability on green innovation and found that corporate profitability positively affects green product innovation, while there was no significant influence on green process innovation.
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Environmental Legitimacy, Green Innovation, and Corporate Carbon Disclosure: Evidence from CDP China 100

TL;DR: Li et al. as discussed by the authors explored the influence of environmental legitimacy (an external informal mechanism) on corporate carbon disclosure, and investigated the role of green innovation (an internal formal mechanism) as a mediator.
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Effects of corporate environmental responsibility on financial performance: The moderating role of government regulation and organizational slack

TL;DR: Based on institutional theory and agency theory, the authors explores the impact of corporate environmental responsibility on corporate financial performance and studies the moderating effect, as well as the co-moderating effect of external government regulation and internal organizational slack on the relationship.
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Can mandatory environmental information disclosure achieve a win-win for a firm’s environmental and economic performance?

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors employ DID (difference in differences) model to identify the effects of China's mandatory environmental information disclosure (MEID) on a firm's environmental and economic performance.