David De Creamer is a Belgian scholar examining behavioral applications to organizations, management and economics. In 2024, he became the dean of Northeastern's D’Amore-McKim School of Business.[1] He was previously at the University of Cambridge (UK) as the KPMG chair in management studies at Judge Business School.[2] He is also a visiting professor at London Business School (LBS) and China Europe International Business School (CEIBS).[3][4] He is the founder of the Erasmus Behavioral Ethics Centre at the Rotterdam School of Management.[5] Throughout his career he has lived and lectured in Europe, US, Middle-East and Asia. His most recent work focuses on the role of leaders with regards to AI-driven transformation.[6]
Early life and education
editDe Cremer was born in Leuven, Belgium, and educated at the University of Leuven, where he obtained a master's degree in social psychology and a bachelor's degree in philosophy. He obtained his Ph.D. at the University of Southampton, UK. His Ph.D. focused on the psychological determinants of cooperation in economic decision-making games.
Honors
editIn 2011, he was awarded the ERIM (Erasmus Research Institute of Management; Rotterdam School of Management) “impact on managerial practices” award in the Netherlands for his book on When good people do bad things: On the psychology behind the financial crisis.
He is an associate editor of the journal Academy of Management Annals. He received the British Psychology Society award for “Outstanding Ph.D. thesis in social psychology”, the “Jos Jaspars Early Career award for outstanding contributions to social psychology”, the “Comenius European Young Psychologist award”, and the “International Society for Justice Research Early Career Contribution Award”. In 2005 he was elected as a member of the Young Academy of the Royal Dutch Academy of Sciences. In 2013 he was awarded the CEIBS Research Excellence Award (Shanghai, China).
Selected publications
edit- De Cremer, D., Van Dick, R., & Murnighan, J.K. (2010). On social animals and organizational beings: A social psychological approach to organizations. In De Cremer, D., Van Dick, R. & Murnighan, J.K. (Eds.), Social psychology and organizations (pp. 3–13). Taylor & Francis.
- De Cremer, D., Zeelenberg, M., & Murnighan, J.K. (2006). Social animals and economic beings: On unifying social psychology and economics. In De Cremer, D., Zeelenberg, M. & Murnighan, J.K. (Eds.), Social psychology and economics (pp. 3–14). Mahwah, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Association.
- De Cremer, D., & Zhang, J. (2014). "Huawei to the future." Business Strategy Review, 25(1), 26-29.
- De Cremer, D. (2011). "Restoring trust in financial institutions.: Financial Services Focus, 46 (February), 22-24.
- De Cremer, D. (2012). "Leaders need a lesson in crisis management". Financial Times (February 7).
References
edit- ^ "David De Cremer installed as Dunton Family Dean of Northeastern's D'Amore-McKim School of Business". Northeastern Global News. 0808. Retrieved 2024-09-02.
- ^ "BofA’s Montag Becomes Sole COO as Darnell Seeks Transfer". By Hugh Son Bloomberg Businessweek, Aug 19, 2014.
- ^ Levin-Epstein, Amy. "Stop procrastinating -- and start being successful". CBSNews Moneywatch
- ^ [Sorry? Apologies overrated, study finds "How to keep calm in a crisis "]. The Independent.
- ^ "Sorry? Apologies overrated, study finds". Toronto Star.
- ^ "Put Humans First, AI Second: David De Cremer". Forbes India. Retrieved 2024-09-02.