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There is no bigger challenge for organizational change management
in the contemporary world than achieving greater sustainability.
The challenges associated with sustainable development are
multifaceted, including criteria pertaining to the delivery of
environmental, social, ethical and economic results. Creating
sustainable value requires companies to address issues that relate
to pollution and waste, created by industrialization; to respond in
a transparent manner to the challenges increasingly raised by the
civil society, namely NGOs; to invest in emerging technologies that
provide innovative solutions to many of today's environmental
problems; and to effectively respond to the challenges of increased
poverty and inequality around the globe. On the other hand, to
create shareholder value, managers must focus not only on cost
reduction and risk control, but also on fostering innovation,
enhancing corporate reputation within external stakeholders, and
establishing a credible growth path for the future. The current
global financial crisis has left few untouched: unprecedented
unemployment figures, public deficits, bankruptcies, redundancies,
austerity regimes, and governments bailing out banks all over the
globe. World confidence is at a record low. How can management
scholars encounter solutions for the dilemmas created by this
scenario of change in which they can manage to change sustainably?
This book provides some answers to these pressing questions. This
book was originally published as a special issue of the Journal of
Change Management.
There is no bigger challenge for organizational change management
in the contemporary world than achieving greater sustainability.
The challenges associated with sustainable development are
multifaceted, including criteria pertaining to the delivery of
environmental, social, ethical and economic results. Creating
sustainable value requires companies to address issues that relate
to pollution and waste, created by industrialization; to respond in
a transparent manner to the challenges increasingly raised by the
civil society, namely NGOs; to invest in emerging technologies that
provide innovative solutions to many of today's environmental
problems; and to effectively respond to the challenges of increased
poverty and inequality around the globe. On the other hand, to
create shareholder value, managers must focus not only on cost
reduction and risk control, but also on fostering innovation,
enhancing corporate reputation within external stakeholders, and
establishing a credible growth path for the future. The current
global financial crisis has left few untouched: unprecedented
unemployment figures, public deficits, bankruptcies, redundancies,
austerity regimes, and governments bailing out banks all over the
globe. World confidence is at a record low. How can management
scholars encounter solutions for the dilemmas created by this
scenario of change in which they can manage to change sustainably?
This book provides some answers to these pressing questions. This
book was originally published as a special issue of the Journal of
Change Management.
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