Management and the Sustainability Paradox

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A01=David Wasieleski
A01=Paul Shrivastava
A01=Sandra Waddock
Adult Development Theory
Atomized Parts
Author_David Wasieleski
Author_Paul Shrivastava
Author_Sandra Waddock
Bounded Awareness
business ethics
Category=KJG
Category=KJU
Chronic
Cluster III
corporate social responsibility
Dual Process Theories
ecological environment
ecological psychology
Ecologizing Mindset
Ecologizing Values
Economizing Values
environmental decision making
environmental management
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
ethical dilemmas in corporate sustainability
evolutionary management theory
Follow
Gdp Growth
Good Life
Great Acceleration
Growth Mindset
Hero's Journey
Hero’s Journey
Hold
Human Chain
IPBES
ISCT
Living Systems
management philosophy
management research
Maximizing Shareholder Wealth
Mindset Shift
moral philosophy in organizations
organizational behviour
Planetary Boundaries
Sixth Great Extinction
social philanthropic projects
sustainability paradox
sustainable business
sustainable management
UN

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138204782
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Jul 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Management and the Sustainability Paradox is about how humans became disconnected from their ecological environment throughout evolutionary history. Begining with the premise that people have competing innate, natural drives linked to survival. Survival can be thought of in the context of long-term genetic propagation of a species, but at the same time, it involves overcoming of immediate adversities. Due to a diverse set of survival challenges facing our ancestors, natural selection often favored short-term solutions, which by consequence, muted the motivations associated with longer-range sustainability values.

Managerial decisions and choices mostly adopt a moral calculus of costs versus benefits. Managers invoke economic and corporate growth to justify virtually any action. It is this moral calculus underlying corporate behavior that needs critical examination and reformation. At the heart of it lie deep moral questions that we examine in this book, with the goal of proposing ethical solutions to the paradox.

Management and the Sustainability Paradox examines the issue that there appears to be an inherent paradox between what some businesses view as "a need for progress" and " a concern for sustainability". In business, we often see a collision between ideas of progress and sustainability which shapes corporate actions, and managerial decisions. Typical corporate views of progress involve the creation of wealth, jobs, innovative products, and social philanthropic projects. On the basis of these "progressive" actions they justify their inequitable distribution of surpluses by paying low wages and exploiting ecological resources. It is not difficult to see the antagonistic interplay between technological and social innovation with our values for social and environmental well-being and a dualism that needs to be overcome.

This book is intended for a broad appeal to an academic and policy maker audience in the sustainability and management fields. The book will be of vital reading for managers seeking to reconnect our human chain with the natural environment in the cause of sustainable business.

David M. Wasieleski is the Management Department, Duquesne University, USA.

Sandra Waddock is Galligan Chair of Strategy, Carroll School Scholar of Corporate Responsibility, and Professor of Management at Boston College's Carroll School of Management. Winner of numerous awards, including a 2017 PRME Pioneer Award, she has published over 150 papers and 13 books, including Healing the World (Routledge/Greenleaf, 2017) and Intellectual Shamans (Cambridge, 2014). Current research interests include transformational system change, memes and narratives in transformations, intellectual shamanism, and management education, and wisdom, among others.

Paul Shrivastava is the Executive Director of Future Earth and was David O’Brien Distinguished Professor of Sustainable Enterprise at Concordia University, USA.

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