|
Showing 1 - 6 of
6 matches in All Departments
The Handbook of Multi-Level Climate Actions emphasizes the need for
significant climate action by every capable person on the planet at
multiple levels of human experience and society. This includes
individuals/households, formal and informal groups,
organizations/communities, from local to global, and all levels of
businesses, governments, and nonprofit organizations. It highlights
the many ways that our species can meet the climate crisis and how
entities at every level of human experience are, could be, and
should be developing and implementing climate solutions, including
those advancing energy efficiency, renewable energy utilization,
and nature’s ability to sequester carbon. Nearly two dozen
knowledgeable, caring, and active authors, representing both
academics and practitioners, from multiple countries and
disciplines, have risen to the challenge of attempting to motivate
as many people as possible to take whatever actions they can as
urgently as possible, to ensure that future generations of both
humans and non-humans on this planet will have a sustainable
climate that meets their on-going needs. This Handbook is an
important work for scholars and practitioners working in the realm
of environmental and climate issues, sustainability and CSR. It
provides a comprehensive exploration of the current global
situation, while also inspiring immediate action and forward
thinking.
Personal Sustainability Practices is a collection of 19 academic
and practitioner perspectives on the topic of faculty personal
sustainability. The book addresses the issues of whether, how,
where, and when faculty who teach, research, consult, and perform
academic and community service are, or need to be, practicing and
communicating their own sustainability behaviors to students and
other stakeholders. The contributors represent multiple countries,
disciplines, academic levels and affiliations, and orientations on
those issues and on the 17 United Nations Sustainable Development
Goals related to their personal sustainability practices. The
chapter contributions highlight the several main concepts of
systems, internal and external integration, curriculum development,
and social movements. The key takeaway is that many sustainability
scholars are practicing and communicating a wide variety of
sustainability actions but that greater consistency and frequency
among faculty sustainability values, expression, and actions are
generally possible and necessary, and that further exploration of
this overall topic is encouraged. Current faculty and doctoral
students in the field of environmental or socio-economic
sustainability, as well as business, government and nonprofit
organization executives who interact with said faculty, will be
inspired by the examination of values and personal practices.
In recent years our understanding of corporate sustainability has
moved from exploitation to exploration, from corporate
environmental management to sustainable entrepreneurship, and from
efficiency to innovation. Yet current trends indicate the need for
radical innovation via entrepreneurial start-ups or new ventures
within existing corporations despite difficulties with the
financing and marketing of such efforts. Presenting both conceptual
and empirical research, this fascinating book addresses how we can
combine environmental and social sustainability with economic
sustainability in order to produce innovative new business models.
The international cast of contributors addresses the wide range of
issues in the balance between growth and environmental concerns.
The first five chapters discuss various aspects of sustainable
entrepreneurship. This is followed by two chapters that look at
innovation within existing firms. Innovation is not successful
until it finds a customer, so the two chapters that follow delve
into the marketing aspects of business-to-consumer and
business-to-business settings. The book closes with a broad
discussion of the evolution and future of the research agenda into
the intersection of sustainability, innovation and
entrepreneurship. Academics, students, business professionals, and
NGOs will find this volume enlightening and useful.
Environmental sustainability practice and research have advanced
over the past decade from novelty to near-mainstream status today.
During this environmentally critical time period, sustainability
practitioner techniques, such as environmental, energy and social
auditing, other sustainability information and related systems, and
a wide variety of environmental sustainability approaches have been
developed, improved and institutionalised, advancing both the
practice and research of environmental sustainability management
and policy. However, academics and practitioners in the
sustainability field still have widely differing perspectives on
what a sustainable organisation is or might be, but seldom take the
opportunity to share these respective sustainability visions, let
alone the multiple ways to achieve them. New Horizons in Research
on Sustainable Organisations is intended to bridge this gap between
academics and practitioners with cutting-edge research from both
groups on progress towards sustainability. After working on
sustainability-related projects involving other academics, both
research- and practitioner-oriented graduate students, consultants,
managers and activists, the lead co-editors of this volume saw the
need to encourage information exchanges among differing networks of
sustainability stakeholders to create a pathway for researchers and
practitioners in the general area of organisations and the natural
environment to address issues of common interest. There are many
networks in the general subject area, but the cross-pollination of
ideas between academics and practitioners remains sketchy. New
Horizons in Research on Sustainable Organisations is intended to
present and encourage such cross-pollination. The chapters in this
volume are presented in three subsets, generally proceeding from
the most "macro" to the most "micro" in terms of perspective and
applicability. However, this arbitrary division belies the
integration from macro through meso (or mid-range) to micro levels
that is apparent in these studies. Macro approaches typically
include wider geographic scopes, greater numbers of stakeholders,
and more complex explanatory factors than micro approaches. Each
chapter adopts one or more particular sustainability world-view and
then grounds these and the other chapter elements within actual
organisations. Therefore, the reader is advised to envision not a
one-dimensional continuum but rather a circle in which the macro
view both feeds back and feeds forward to the micro view. This
volume addresses a number of intriguing and important sustainable
organisation phenomena such as multiple sustainable development
perspectives, changing environmental politics, environmental
management systems variations, voluntary environmental programme
performance, complex adaptive systems, and environmental technology
development. Additionally, several models are suggested, such as
cultivation, capabilities and business ecology frameworks.
Managing for sustainable development has become increasingly
accepted worldwide by corporate, public, and non-profit
organizations as vital to the continued existence and development
of both these organizations and their natural and social
environments. This collection of original papers provides various
perspectives on sustainable management practices, particularly as
practiced by large corporations. The ten studies in this volume
represent the latest theoretical and empirical research in the
field of organizations and the natural environment. The
contributors present a range of unique perspectives on issues
including the impact of globalization on sustainability,
cross-cultural comparisons of the impact of institutional contexts
on environmental practices of Japanese and Chinese firms,
comparisons of voluntary environmental initiatives undertaken by
public and private sector organizations, processes of
organizational change in response to stakeholder pressures, the
transfer of environmental capabilities during mergers and
acquisitions, why some companies keep the environmentally friendly
features of their products secret, and the influence of emissions
and health-impacts information on attitudes toward the environment.
This volume opens and closes with two essays that comprehensively
review the state of research in organizations and the natural
environment and suggest directions for future researchers. This
insightful book presents studies from a wide range of disciplinary
perspectives: Human Resources Management, Strategy, Operations
Management, Accounting, International Business, Marketing, and
Development. It represents the latest state of knowledge in
organizations and the natural environment and provides interesting
perspectives for academics, environmental consultants as well as
environmental managers from business, the public sector, NGOs,
international development institutions, and government.
The role of stakeholders is integral to corporate sustainability as
society increasingly demands that corporations play a role in
achieving environmental objectives in addition to building
shareholder wealth. In the first book to gather cutting-edge
research on the interactions between stakeholders and organizations
within the context of corporate sustainability, the contributors to
this volume provide a diversity of perspectives from North America,
Europe, and Oceania.The authors examine the role stakeholders play
in influencing regulations on global issues such as climate change
and national and regional problems. Stakeholder selection of
companies and the sustainability issues they choose to target are
explored, as are the ways in which organizations motivate them to
participate in the evolution of holistic sustainable solutions. The
interactions between stakeholder pressures, organizational
characteristics and corporate sustainability practices are also
covered. Finally, the volume provides an examination of the dynamic
structure of organizational fields in the European automobile
industry in order to analyze the factors that foster or hinder
ecological modernization. Academics, environmental consultants,
sustainability managers, NGOs, and international development
institutions will find this timely volume of great value.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R391
R362
Discovery Miles 3 620
|