73 results on '"Ralf Barkemeyer"'
Search Results
2. E-procurement and firm corruption to secure public contracts: The moderating role of governance institutions and supranational support
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Alfredo Jiménez, Julien Hanoteau, Ralf Barkemeyer, Kedge Business School (Kedge BS), Aix-Marseille Sciences Economiques (AMSE), École des hautes études en sciences sociales (EHESS)-Aix Marseille Université (AMU)-École Centrale de Marseille (ECM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), and Part of the I + D + i project PID2019-104408GB-I00, funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033
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Corruption ,Marketing ,Supranational support ,Transaction costs ,JEL: M - Business Administration and Business Economics • Marketing • Accounting • Personnel Economics/M.M1 - Business Administration/M.M1.M19 - Other ,[SHS.GESTION]Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administration ,Digitalization ,Governance institutions ,E-procurement - Abstract
International audience; This paper investigates the effects of e-procurement on firm corruption to secure public contracts, highlighting the moderating roles of the quality of governance institutions and supranational support in that relationship. Taking transaction cost economics as our theoretical lens, and building on a sample of 8,373 firms in 72 countries from 2008 to 2019, we find that the adoption of an e-procurement system in fact reduces firm corruption. However, this effect is only unveiled once one accounts in the analysis for the quality of country-level governance institutions, which also makes the relationship stronger. We also find an eprocurement system only to effectively address firm corruption when it benefits from supranational support. The study contributes to the ongoing academic debate on the impact of digitalization on corruption.
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- 2022
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3. The <scp>SDGs</scp> : A change agenda shaping the future of business and humanity at large
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Dima Jamali, Ralf Barkemeyer, Georges Samara, and Stefan Markovic
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Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Economics and Econometrics ,Philosophy ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Business and International Management - Published
- 2022
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4. Publishing Big Data Research in Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility
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Ralf Barkemeyer, Georges Samara, Stefan Markovic, and Dima Jamali
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Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Economics and Econometrics ,Philosophy ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Business and International Management - Published
- 2023
5. A critical review of the socially responsible consumer
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Ning Lu, Phani Kumar Chintakayala, Timothy Devinney, William Young, and Ralf Barkemeyer
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- 2023
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6. Grand challenges in developing countries: Context, relationships, and logics
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Georges Samara, Dima Jamali, Jennifer S Leigh, and Ralf Barkemeyer
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Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Economics and Econometrics ,Philosophy ,Political science ,Regional science ,Developing country ,Context (language use) ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Business and International Management ,Grand Challenges - Published
- 2021
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7. Behind the scenes of an academic journal: Challenges, commitment, and resilience
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Dima Jamali, Ralf Barkemeyer, Stefan Markovic, and Georges Samara
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Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Economics and Econometrics ,Philosophy ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Business and International Management - Published
- 2022
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8. Eco-labels, Conspicuous Conservation and Moral Licensing: An Indirect Behavioural Rebound Effect
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Ralf Barkemeyer, C. William Young, Phani Kumar Chintakayala, and Anne Owen
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Economics and Econometrics ,General Medicine ,General Environmental Science - Published
- 2022
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9. Impression management tactics in the CEO statements of Turkish sustainability reports
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Arzu Özsözgün Çalişkan, Ralf Barkemeyer, and Emel Esen
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Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Economics and Econometrics ,Philosophy ,Impression management ,business.industry ,Turkish ,Sustainability ,language ,Business ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Business and International Management ,Public relations ,language.human_language - Published
- 2021
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10. Opportunity Identification for Sustainable Entrepreneurship: Exploring the Interplay of Individual and Context Level Factors in India
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Fanny Salignac, Ralf Barkemeyer, Padmaja Argade, and Kedge Business School (Kedge BS)
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Motivation ,Knowledge management ,0502 Environmental Science and Management, 1501 Accounting, Auditing and Accountability, 1503 Business and Management ,9. Industry and infrastructure ,business.industry ,Strategy and Management ,05 social sciences ,Geography, Planning and Development ,1. No poverty ,India ,Context (language use) ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Within-country variation ,[SHS]Humanities and Social Sciences ,Business & Management ,0502 economics and business ,050211 marketing ,Identification (biology) ,Sustainable entrepreneurship ,Sociology ,Business and International Management ,business ,Opportunity identification ,050203 business & management - Abstract
International audience; Sustainable entrepreneurship is becoming an increasingly established topic within the entrepreneurship literature. The phenomenon of businesses incorporating social and environmental agendas within their core activities has gathered an increasing academic interest. However, few empirical studies have explored the stage of opportunity identification in the sustainable entrepreneurship process in a more systematic manner, even more so in non-Western contexts such as India. We structure our analysis using a framework situated in the conventional entrepreneurship literature and the literature on National Business Systems (NBS). We conduct a qualitative study to explore the motivations of Indian sustainable entrepreneurs in two sectors: sustainable energy and ethical clothing. While we find that the conventional entrepreneurship based framework provides crucial insights to understand opportunity identification within sustainable entrepreneurship, we alsoobserve a number of features unique to sustainable entrepreneurship in the Indian context—including the personal backgrounds of the participants as well as prioritization of motivational factors. Importantly, we find notable within-country variation in the contextual factors that appear to shape motivational dynamics. In the words of one participant, “there are many Indias” rather than one monolithic approach to sustainable entrepreneurship in India.
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- 2021
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11. Selection bias in ESG controversies as a risk for sustainable investors
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Ralf Barkemeyer, Christophe Revelli, and Anatole Douaud
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Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,Strategy and Management ,Building and Construction ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,General Environmental Science - Published
- 2023
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12. BEER Heterodoxies
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Dima Jamali, Stefan Markovic, Ralf Barkemeyer, Georges Samara, Alejandro Agafonow, Dirk Moosmayer, and Cristina Neesham
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Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Economics and Econometrics ,Philosophy ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Business and International Management - Published
- 2022
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13. Emotional framing of NGO press releases: Reformative versus radical NGOs
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Giulio Napolitano, Ralf Barkemeyer, Tulin Dzhengiz, Department of Management Studies, KEDGE Business School, University of Leipzig, Aalto-yliopisto, and Aalto University
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framing ,NGO‐business relationships ,Strategy and Management ,Corporate governance ,05 social sciences ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Sentiment analysis ,cross‐sector partnerships ,Sample (statistics) ,010501 environmental sciences ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Public administration ,01 natural sciences ,reformative NGOs ,sentiment analysis ,Framing (construction) ,Political science ,0502 economics and business ,Credibility ,radical NGOs ,Business and International Management ,050203 business & management ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Drawing on the literature on framing, we explore the emotional framing differences in radical and reformative NGOs over time. We analyse the sentiment of a sample of 5880 press releases issued by five NGOs positioned differently on the reformative-radical spectrum and examine how they address large companies. Our findings reveal an increasing polarisation of sentiment in these NGOs' framing, with individual NGOs gravitating towards ideal-type radical or reformative positions, respectively. In alignment with the differences in their framing, we observe differences in their approaches to cross-sector partnerships. Policymakers need to note the implications of the observed polarisation for the effectiveness and credibility of cross-sector partnerships and multi-stakeholder initiatives more generally, given the risk of co-optation (for reformative NGOs) as well as the risk of foregoing significant funding and governance opportunities (for radical NGOs).
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- 2021
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14. The Impact of Corporate Social Responsibility
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Robert Kudłak, Ralf Barkemeyer, Lutz Preuss, and Anna Heikkinen
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- 2022
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15. Rising Like a Phoenix
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Dima Jamali, Georges Samara, Stefan Markovic, and Ralf Barkemeyer
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Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Economics and Econometrics ,Philosophy ,biology ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Business and International Management ,Phoenix ,biology.organism_classification ,Psychology ,Archaeology - Published
- 2021
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16. Media attention to large-scale corporate scandals: Hype and boredom in the age of social media
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Christophe Faugère, Lutz Preuss, Olivier Gergaud, and Ralf Barkemeyer
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Marketing ,05 social sciences ,Media studies ,Boredom ,Corporate reputation ,Scale (social sciences) ,Political science ,0502 economics and business ,medicine ,Corporate social responsibility ,050211 marketing ,Social media ,medicine.symptom ,050203 business & management - Abstract
We investigate how media attention to large-scale corporate scandals has changed over time, and how the clustering of different scandals alters media attention to individual scandals. Building on the literature on media agenda-setting, we examine quality newspaper coverage for a sample of 123 major corporate scandals between 1990 and 2016. Whilst previous studies have typically examined specific corporate scandals in isolation, we find that the interplay of scandals is characterized both by crowding-in processes (or hype effects) – which predominantly occur when scandals fall into different categories – and crowding-out processes (or boredom effects) – which dominate when scandals are of one and the same category. Over time, and reflecting the emergence of social media, we find substantial changes in attention patterns, where more recent scandals have attracted significantly higher peaks of attention followed by a much steeper decline.
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- 2020
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17. Do Business Ethics Really Matter?
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Dima Jamali, Georges Samara, Stefan Markovic, and Ralf Barkemeyer
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Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Economics and Econometrics ,Philosophy ,Engineering ethics ,Business ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Business and International Management ,Business ethics - Published
- 2021
18. Developmental and collegial peer‐reviews: A BEER roadmap
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Georges Samara, Dima Jamali, and Ralf Barkemeyer
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Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Economics and Econometrics ,Philosophy ,Engineering ethics ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Business and International Management ,Psychology - Published
- 2021
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19. Chaos as opportunity
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Georges Samara, Dima Jamali, Ralf Barkemeyer, and Jennifer S Leigh
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CHAOS (operating system) ,Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Economics and Econometrics ,Philosophy ,Business ,Statistical physics ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Business and International Management - Published
- 2020
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20. Open Access, Open Science, and Coronavirus: Mega trends with historical proportions
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Georges Samara, Dima Jamali, Jennifer S Leigh, and Ralf Barkemeyer
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Economics and Econometrics ,Open science ,Editorial ,Political science ,medicine ,Library science ,Business and International Management ,Mega ,medicine.disease_cause ,Coronavirus - Published
- 2020
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21. Want to get your paper published? Please follow this virtuous guidance!
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Dima Jamali, Ralf Barkemeyer, Jennifer S Leigh, and Georges Samara
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Economics and Econometrics ,Political science ,Business and International Management - Published
- 2020
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22. Trends and patterns in sustainable entrepreneurship research: A bibliometric review and research agenda
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Fanny Salignac, Padmaja Argade, Ralf Barkemeyer, and Amitabh Anand
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Knowledge creation ,Business & Management ,Multidisciplinary approach ,Management of Technology and Innovation ,Political science ,Triple bottom line ,Regional science ,Sustainable entrepreneurship ,Business and International Management ,Bibliographic coupling ,Field (computer science) ,1502 Banking, Finance and Investment, 1503 Business and Management, 1505 Marketing - Abstract
Sustainable entrepreneurship (SE) has attracted significant scholarly attention over the last decade. Given its rapid development and its multidisciplinary character, the SE literature is increasingly difficult to navigate. We combine two bibliometric approaches (i.e. co-citation analysis of references and bibliographic coupling of documents) with manual coding of documents to take stock of progress within the field, mapping out focal points as well as blind spots in the SE research agenda. We show how distinct subfields have formed around key ideas expressed in subsets of seminal papers, shedding light on the relational nature of knowledge creation – uncovering the characteristics, evolution and future trajectories of these subfields. We develop a future research agenda based on the developments of the overall field as well as the subfields of SE.
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- 2021
23. The Impact of Corporate Social Responsibility : Corporate Activities, the Environment and Society
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Robert Kudłak, Ralf Barkemeyer, Lutz Preuss, Anna Heikkinen, Robert Kudłak, Ralf Barkemeyer, Lutz Preuss, and Anna Heikkinen
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- Project management, Social responsibility of business--Environmental aspects
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The Impact of Corporate Social Responsibility: Corporate Activities, the Environment and Society adds to the current debate on the societal-level impacts of corporate social responsibility (CSR). This edited volume offers conceptual and empirical contributions highlighting various dimensions of CSR impacts. What differentiates the book from others is that we examine the impact of CSR at the societal level, rather than focussing only on those at occur at the level of the firm. The book's contributions present novel perspectives that comprise, among others, empirical analyses of CSR activities, accounts of impacts in various geographic locations, and state-of-the-art reviews of extant literature on the topic. The practical examples and theory-building presented here help us to better capture the societal impacts of contemporary CSR practice. This book will appeal to scholars and students as well as practitioners and policy makers interested in practical and theoretical aspects of CSR impacts at the societal-level.Chapter 3 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF at http://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives CC-BY 4.0 license.
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- 2023
24. Business, peacebuilding, violent conflict and sustainable development in Myanmar: presenting evidence from a new survey dataset
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Jason Miklian and Ralf Barkemeyer
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Sustainable development ,business.industry ,Strategy and Management ,Peacebuilding ,Stakeholder ,Ethnic conflict ,Public relations ,Private sector ,Political science ,Survey data collection ,Corporate social responsibility ,Business and International Management ,Business ethics ,business ,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance - Abstract
Purpose This paper aims to present a new survey data set of 9,065 private sector respondents and other stakeholder groups, in Myanmar. The primary aim of this paper is to offer new insight avenues on local business–conflict–development interactions, and offer the full survey data set itself as an open-source research tool for scholars and practitioners. Design/methodology/approach The survey was conducted over smartphone in 2018. It asked questions that aimed to better understand the relationships between business, ethnic conflict, investment, corporate social responsibility and the United Nations sustainable development goals in Myanmar and in Rakhine State in particular. Findings The data set captures a series of significant differences in corporate leadership perspectives on the role of business in society, across sectors (e.g. banking, agriculture, retail, manufacturing, extractives) and variations across firm country of ownership (e.g. national firms, Global North firms, Indian firms, Chinese firms). Research limitations/implications The authors conclude with a brief discussion of possible research findings from the survey, offering suggestions for possible forward analysis. The authors offer here the raw survey data as an attachment for full global open-source use and application. Practical implications This data set offers a unique window into stakeholder perceptions and understandings of working through conflict, and the role of business in development in a fragile conflict-affected state (Myanmar). The authors also conduct two example analyses of the data set using ANOVA and Kruskal–Wallis tests to illustrate possible uses and findings of the data set. Social implications The authors briefly discuss social implications as well, particularly regarding the role of business in peacebuilding and development. Originality/value This data set offers a unique window into stakeholder perceptions and understandings of working through conflict, and the role of business in development in a fragile conflict-affected state (Myanmar). The authors also conduct two example analyses of the data set using ANOVA and Kruskal–Wallis tests to illustrate possible uses and findings of the data set.
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- 2021
25. BE:ER is beyond suppression
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Ralf Barkemeyer, Georges Samara, Dima Jamali, and Jennifer S Leigh
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Economics and Econometrics ,Political science ,Business and International Management - Published
- 2020
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26. Mapping the Trajectories of Sustainable Entrepreneurship Research - a Review and Research Agenda (WITHDRAWN)
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Fanny Salignac, Amitabh Anand, Padmaja Argade, and Ralf Barkemeyer
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Character (mathematics) ,Multidisciplinary approach ,Political science ,Engineering ethics ,General Medicine ,Sustainable entrepreneurship - Abstract
Sustainable entrepreneurship (SE) has attracted significant scholarly attention over the last decade. Given its rapid development and its multidisciplinary character, the SE literature is increasin...
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- 2021
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27. Trends and patterns in sustainability-related media coverage: A classification of issue-level attention
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Frank Figge, Ralf Barkemeyer, and Philippe Givry
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Sustainable development ,Public Administration ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Geography, Planning and Development ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,050801 communication & media studies ,021107 urban & regional planning ,Media coverage ,Headline ,02 engineering and technology ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) ,Public relations ,0508 media and communications ,Geography ,Sustainability ,business ,Set (psychology) ,Key policy - Abstract
Sustainability has moved from fringe topic to headline news and key policy discourse in its own right. Yet, the sustainability discourse remains fragmented, with a diverse set of challenges receiving vastly different levels of attention. Nevertheless, the vast majority of previous studies have focused on media attention to climate change, whereas other sustainability challenges have received much less attention in the academic literature. In this paper, we explore trends and patterns in media coverage across a set of ten sustainability challenges. In particular, we are interested in the extent to which the recent trends and patterns in coverage that have been well-documented for climate change are reflected by other sustainability challenges. We utilise a sample of 23 broadsheet newspapers from five different countries (Australia, Canada, Germany, UK, US), covering a 17-year period from 2000 to 2016. Using the agenda-setting literature as a starting-point for our enquiry, we then turn to the toolset provided by financial econometrics to develop a basic typology of media attention focusing on the two dimensions information/noise and seasonality/non-seasonality. We find that media coverage on climate change, poverty and HIV/AIDS can mainly be characterized as information, whereas the remaining seven issues included in our study appear noise-driven. Seasonal patterns in coverage appear most pronounced for socioeconomic issues. Media attention to biodiversity and cleaner technologies has been crowded in by increased coverage on climate change. At the same time, we find clear divergences from overall trends and patterns at the level of different countries and individual newspapers.
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- 2017
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28. CSP and governance in emerging and developing country firms: Of mirrors and substitutes
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Fanny Salignac, Ralf Barkemeyer, and Padmaja Argade
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Corporate social performance ,Human rights ,Corporate governance ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Developing country ,Political Science & Public Administration ,Sample (statistics) ,0506 political science ,1606 Political Science ,Market economy ,0502 economics and business ,Political Science and International Relations ,Industrial relations ,050602 political science & public administration ,Corporate social responsibility ,Business ,Institutional theory ,Emerging markets ,050203 business & management ,media_common - Abstract
A recent debate in the international CSR literature has focused on the question whether CSR serves as a mirror or a substitute of country-level governance. Advocates of the mirror view highlight the role of country level institutions to drive corporate social performance (CSP) levels, whereas proponents of the substitute view find companies to become more active in light of governance gaps. We contribute to this debate by moving the focus to a sample of 264 emerging economy and developing country companies and by comparing the relationship between country-level governance and CSP based on three different CSP dimensions, namely, emissions, human rights, and community performance. Whilst we find corporate emissions performance and human rights performance to align more closely with the mirror view, there is some indication that corporate community performance—possibly traced back to the longstanding tradition of corporate philanthropy in non-Western contexts—instead acts as a substitute to fill institutional voids. We discuss implications of our findings for research and policymakers.
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- 2019
29. Fracking and Metaphor: Analysing Newspaper Discourse in the USA, Australia and the United Kingdom
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Giulio Napolitano, Barbara Gabriella Renzi, Matthew Cotton, Ralf Barkemeyer, Publica, and Kedge Business School (Kedge BS)
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Economics and Econometrics ,Generality ,Hierarchy ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Metaphor ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Media studies ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Boom ,Newspaper ,[SHS]Humanities and Social Sciences ,Politics ,Fracking Mass media MetaphorType hierarchy approach Unconventional hydrocarbon development ,Insanity ,Political science ,business ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,General Environmental Science ,media_common ,Mass media - Abstract
We apply a mixed-method design centred on the deployment of metaphors to explore the role that language plays in the structuring of the public discourses of unconventional hydrocarbon development (UHD) across three major developed economies. We analyse UHD-related metaphorical devices deployed in broadsheet newspapers in Australia, the UK and the USA between January 2006 and May 2018. We develop an innovative Type Hierarchy Approach to metaphors by mapping through directed graph hierarchies. These allow concept-mapping analysis in terms of supertypes and subtypes, i.e. concepts ordered in terms of generality and inclusion as in “rapid expansion” → “explosion”. We find two broad discourses, each containing metaphorical constructions: economic gain across temporal horizons (incorporating boom, bonanza, revolution and death metaphors); and risk tolerance and decision-making (incorporating gamble and insanity metaphors). At the level of individual metaphors, deployment trends and patterns can be mapped along country borders rather than for example political alignment. Boom and bonanza appear most widespread in the USA, whereas UHD as a revolution is more closely associated with UK newspapers. Over time, UHD-related metaphor use decreases in all three countries, potentially reflecting an increasing public acceptance of UHD and moving shale gas from unconventional to conventional hydrocarbon development.
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- 2019
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30. Media coverage of climate change: An international comparison
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Pei Shan Yu, Johannes Marcelus Kraak, Frank Figge, Andreas G. F. Hoepner, Ralf Barkemeyer, and Diane Holt
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Public Administration ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Global warming ,Environmental resource management ,Climate change ,050801 communication & media studies ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) ,050905 science studies ,Gross domestic product ,Newspaper ,0508 media and communications ,Geography ,Unemployment ,Development economics ,Per capita ,Position (finance) ,0509 other social sciences ,Institutional theory ,business ,media_common - Abstract
We present an international comparison of broadsheet newspaper coverage of climate change. We employ two complementary theoretical lenses, multiple streams theory and institutional theory, to explore why climate change has become headline news in some countries but has received comparatively little coverage in others. The study utilises a worldwide sample across 41 different countries for the year 2008, covering 113 leading national broadsheet newspapers. A cross-sectional regression model is used to identify whether and how a range of contextual factors impact coverage of climate change. To a certain extent, a country’s direct exposure to climate change and the measures that have been taken to combat global warming influence the position of climate change on the media agenda. Crucially, however, we identify a number of contextual factors that impact climate change-related media coverage in different national contexts. In particular, we find a significantly positive relationship between regulatory quality and levels of media coverage. At the same time, unemployment trends are significantly negatively related to media attention to climate change. Gross domestic product per capita does not help to explain levels of climate change-related media coverage. In other words, climate change appears to have moved beyond simply being a ‘rich country issue’.
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- 2017
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31. Corporate Social Responsibility in Developing Country Multinationals: Identifying Company and Country-Level Influences
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Lutz Preuss, Ralf Barkemeyer, and Ante Glavas
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Economics and Econometrics ,business.industry ,Corporate governance ,05 social sciences ,Developing country ,Accounting ,06 humanities and the arts ,Public relations ,0603 philosophy, ethics and religion ,General Business, Management and Accounting ,Philosophy ,Country level ,Extant taxon ,Multinational corporation ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,Corporate social responsibility ,060301 applied ethics ,business ,Developed country ,050203 business & management - Abstract
The extant literature on cross-national differences in approaches to corporate social responsibility (CSR) has mostly focused on developed countries. Instead, we offer two inter-related studies into corporate codes of conduct issued by developing country multinational enterprises (DMNEs). First, we analyse code adoption rates and code content through a mixed methods design. Second, we use multilevel analyses to examine country-level drivers of differences in code content—specifically, elements of a country’s National Business System (NBS). We find that DMNEs are much more likely to adopt a code of conduct than their domestic counterparts; however, this does not translate into greater code comprehensiveness. We also find support for the ‘substitute view’ of CSR in developing countries, i.e. that MNEs from poorer countries and from countries with lower governance effectiveness tend to express more comprehensive commitments. However, this dynamic does not extend to a country’s labour system; instead, CSR appears here to match the efficiency of a country’s labour market, thus reflecting the ‘mirror view’ of CSR.
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- 2016
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32. Event and Core Stigma in Corporate Scandals
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Arno Kourula, Olivier Gergaud, Ralf Barkemeyer, Lutz Preuss, and Christophe Faugère
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business.industry ,Political science ,Stigma (botany) ,General Medicine ,Public relations ,business - Abstract
This paper argues that event and core stigma play an important role in shaping how the media cover corporate scandals. We utilize a novel dataset of 200 corporate scandals to analyze the interactio...
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- 2020
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33. Developing country firms and the challenge of corruption: do company commitments mirror the quality of national-level institutions?
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Lutz Preuss, Marc Ohana, Ralf Barkemeyer, Kedge Business School (Kedge BS), Centre de recherche et d'études en gestion (CREG), and Université de Pau et des Pays de l'Adour (UPPA)
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Marketing ,business.industry ,Corruption ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Corporate governance ,05 social sciences ,1. No poverty ,Developing country ,Accounting ,16. Peace & justice ,Private governance ,Content analysis ,0502 economics and business ,Corporate social responsibility ,[SHS.GESTION]Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administration ,National level ,Quality (business) ,Business ,050207 economics ,050203 business & management ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,media_common - Abstract
Corruption is an important topic for management scholars and practitioners. Given the rise to economic prominence of firms from developing countries, this paper investigates how developing country firms engage with this challenge. Based on a content analysis of 191 codes of conduct, issued by firms from 18 developing countries, we first investigate what anti-corruption commitments developing country firms make in their codes of conduct; we then determine contextual factors at national business system level that drive differences in firm engagement. We provide evidence for a “mirror view” of corporate social responsibility, according to which companies match the quality of national-level institutions in their own anti-corruption commitments. This result stands in contrast to the basic expectation underlying the concept of corporate social responsibility that companies step in to close governance gaps and address wider societal-level challenges. Our findings thus highlight limitations to purely private governance mechanisms aimed at combatting corruption.
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- 2018
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34. A reinvigorated vision for BE:ER to sustain a trajectory of excellence
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Ralf Barkemeyer, Dima Jamali, Jennifer S Leigh, and George Samara
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Economics and Econometrics ,Aeronautics ,Excellence ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Trajectory ,Sociology ,Business and International Management ,media_common - Published
- 2019
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35. Corporate reporting on corruption: An international comparison
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Lutz Preuss, Ralf Barkemeyer, Lindsay Lee, and Kedge Business School (Kedge BS)
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business.industry ,Corruption ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Accounting ,Sample (statistics) ,[SHS]Humanities and Social Sciences ,Anti corruption ,Sustainability ,Sustainability reporting ,Business ,Institutional theory ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,Finance ,media_common - Abstract
Building on an institutionalist framework of the various organizational field-level pressures on firms to engage with the challenge of corruption, we analyse anti-corruption disclosures across a sample of 933 sustainability reports. Such reporting complements anti-corruption initiatives, as it allows the company to demonstrate its commitment. Our results show clear country- and sector-level differences in the extent to which companies communicate their anti-corruption engagement. However, the more a company is exposed to corruption, the less likely it appears to openly communicate its anti-corruption engagement. Hence, our results cast doubt on the effectiveness of anti-corruption disclosures as part of wider sustainability reporting.
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- 2015
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36. Media attention to corporate scandals over time
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Lutz Preuss, Christophe Faugère, Ralf Barkemeyer, Olivier Gergaud, and Kedge Business School (Kedge BS)
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Intangible asset ,Political science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Advertising ,General Medicine ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,Corporate reputation ,Reputation ,media_common ,[SHS]Humanities and Social Sciences - Abstract
Corporate reputation is widely seen as a valuable if intangible asset for most companies. In turn, a company’s reputation is shaped in significant ways by the attention it receives in the mass medi...
- Published
- 2017
37. Development-Oriented Corporate Social Responsibility: Volume 1
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Lutz Preuss, Frank Figge, and Ralf Barkemeyer
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Typology ,Government ,business.industry ,Multinational corporation ,Order (exchange) ,Stakeholder ,Distribution (economics) ,Corporate social responsibility ,International business ,business ,Industrial organization - Abstract
This chapter investigates multinational companies (MNC) headquartering effect empirically. It briefly reviews the international corporate social responsibility (CSR) literature using Prahalad and Doz’s integration-responsiveness framework and Bartlett and Ghoshal’s typology of international business approaches as a starting-point. The chapter explains the headquartering effect in international CSR. It focuses on the implications of the headquartering effect for corporate practice and policy-makers as well as limitations stemming from the empirical analysis. The existence of a headquartering effect has profound implications for development-oriented CSR. MNCs should integrate their CSR activities globally in order to make the provision of CSR cost-effective and to adequately respond to global social problems; at the same time, they should be locally responsive to their various stakeholder groups in the particular contexts they operate in. The transnational approach aims to take advantage of both high local responsiveness and global integration. Pressures for local responsiveness arise from national differences in customer needs, distribution channels or host government demands.
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- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Social media is not the ‘silver bullet’ to reducing household food waste, a response to Grainger and Stewart (2017)
- Author
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C. William Young, Sally Russell, Ralf Barkemeyer, and Kedge Business School (Kedge BS)
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Economics and Econometrics ,Behaviour change ,020205 medical informatics ,02 engineering and technology ,Jigsaw ,[SHS]Humanities and Social Sciences ,Body of knowledge ,03 medical and health sciences ,Food waste ,0302 clinical medicine ,Silver bullet ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Behaviour change interventions ,Social media ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Sociology ,Marketing ,Socioeconomics ,Waste Management and Disposal ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS - Abstract
In our reply to Grainger and Stewart (2017) we concur with their observation on the need for evidence-based synthesis in examining the efficacy of behaviour change interventions. We argue that our paper (Young et al., 2017) makes a contribution to the body of knowledge on behaviour change and in so doing it provides an important piece of the jigsaw in understanding the influence of social media on food waste behaviour.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Can social media be a tool for reducing consumers’ food waste? A behaviour change experiment by a UK retailer
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Ralf Barkemeyer, Sally Russell, Cheryl A. Robinson, William Young, and Kedge Business School (Kedge BS)
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Economics and Econometrics ,Behaviour change ,020209 energy ,Control (management) ,Psychological intervention ,02 engineering and technology ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,[SHS]Humanities and Social Sciences ,Social media ,Social influence ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Economics ,Marketing ,Waste Management and Disposal ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Food waste ,Advertising ,Consumer ,Intervention (law) ,Retailer - Abstract
This paper reports on a landmark study to field-test the influence of a large retailer to change the behaviour of its millions of customers. Previous studies have suggested that social media interaction can influence behaviour. This study implemented three interventions with messages to encourage reductions in food waste. The first was a social influence intervention that used the retailer’s Facebook pages to encourage its customers to interact. Two additional information interventions were used as a comparison through the retailer’s print/digital magazine and e-newsletter. Three national surveys tracked customers’ self-reported food waste one month before as well as two weeks after and five months after the interventions. The control group included those who said they had not seen any of the interventions. The results were surprising and significant in that the social media and e-newsletter interventions as well as the control group all showed significant reductions in self-reported food waste by customers over the study period. Hence in this field study, social media does not seem to replicate enough of the effect of ‘face-to-face’ interaction shown in previous studies to change behaviour above other factors in the shopping setting. This may indicate that results from laboratory-based studies may over-emphasise the effect of social media interventions.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. CEO statements in sustainability reports: Substantive information or background noise?
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Giulio Napolitano, Frank Figge, Breeda Comyns, and Ralf Barkemeyer
- Subjects
business.industry ,Sentiment analysis ,Analogy ,Accounting ,Public relations ,Corporate sustainability ,Impression management ,Sustainability ,Accountability ,Sustainability reporting ,Business ,Sustainability organizations ,Finance - Abstract
This paper examines the question of whether corporate sustainability reports can serve as accurate and fair representations of corporate sustainability performance. It presents the results of a sentiment analysis of CEO statements in corporate sustainability reports and corporate financial reports between 2001 and 2010. Making an analogy with corporate financial reporting it is expected that if corporate sustainability reports accurately reflect sustainability performance, then this should be reflected in the rhetoric used. The analysis shows that the rhetoric in the CEO statements of sustainability reports is indicative of impression management rather than accountability, despite increasing standardization of sustainability reporting.
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- 2014
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- View/download PDF
41. The If, How and Where of assessing sustainable resource use
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Tobias Hahn, Ralf Barkemeyer, and Frank Figge
- Subjects
Structure (mathematical logic) ,Economics and Econometrics ,Process management ,business.industry ,Perspective (graphical) ,Sustainability ,Environmental resource management ,Economics ,Resource use ,Context (language use) ,business ,Structuring ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
In today's economies those who sustain the burden of resource use, those using resources and those providing resources are not necessarily identical. With this separation come three fundamental but interrelated decision-making perspectives on the sustainability assessment of resource use. These three perspectives correspond to the three assessment questions if, how, and where resources should be used. Most sustainability assessment approaches do not make their underlying assessment perspectives explicit. The goal of this paper is to provide structure and organisation to existing approaches. This structuring suggests that any discussion on the appropriateness and validity of different assessment approaches and their results must take into account the underlying assessment perspective. The three questions if, how, and where resources should be used correspond to the requirements of a sustainable resource use. While existing assessments do address the three questions in isolation, it is all the more important that the limitations and implications of focusing on a single perspective are spelled out. As the main contribution, the paper distinguishes the rationale of each assessment perspective and develops on their interlinkages and thus provides the context and structure for a more informed and fruitful debate on the assessment of sustainable resource use.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Business and development: Changing discourses in the extractive industries
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Ralf Barkemeyer and James Van Alstine
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Sociology and Political Science ,Divergence (linguistics) ,Field (Bourdieu) ,Convergence (economics) ,General Medicine ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Managerialism ,Good governance ,Development (topology) ,New business development ,Order (exchange) ,General partnership ,Agency (sociology) ,Business ,Economic system ,Law - Abstract
This paper identifies how organisational field dynamics have changed over time within the field of business and development. Using the extractive industries as the empirical setting, development agency policy documents and corporate reports are analysed in order to identify convergence and divergence of discourses and changing institutional logics. The business-development organisational field became structured around a new variant of development managerialism in the early 2000s. Business became recognised as a core partner in devising and implementing market-driven development solutions. Thus, the logic of partnership for economic growth dominated this time period. In the late 2000s a divergence in the business and development organisational field is identified. Attempts by UNDP and other international organisations to temper market-driven development have given rise to the logic of good governance whereas the logic of partnership for development continues to drive that of the extractive industries. It will be interesting to explore in the future how these organisational fields compete or self-reinforce over time. The field of business and development, dominated by development managerialism, could become more fragmented or could move towards convergence and restructuration.
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- 2014
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- View/download PDF
43. Sufficiency or efficiency to achieve lower resource consumption and emissions? The role of the rebound effect
- Author
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Ralf Barkemeyer, William Young, and Frank Figge
- Subjects
Consumption (economics) ,Jevons paradox ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,Natural resource economics ,Strategy and Management ,Welfare economics ,Rebound effect (conservation) ,Eco-efficiency ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Order (exchange) ,Economics ,Dividend ,Eco-sufficiency ,Resource consumption ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
A frequent criticism of eco-efficiency strategies is that an increase in efficiency can be offset by the rebound effect. Sufficiency is discussed as a new strategy involving self-imposed restriction of consumption but can also be subject to the rebound effect. We show that the range of possible secondary effects of efficiency and sufficiency strategies goes beyond the rebound effect. The rebound effect can indeed also be linked to eco-sufficiency strategies but there are further secondary effects of both eco-efficiency and eco-sufficiency strategies, such as double dividend effects. We develop an ‘Eco-efficiency-sufficiency matrix’ to logically order eco-efficiency and sufficiency measures to attain lower resource consumption and emissions.
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- 2014
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- View/download PDF
44. Leader Ambivalence and Corporate Social Performance
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Ralf Barkemeyer and Tobias Hahn
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Corporate social performance ,Focus (computing) ,General Medicine ,Sociology ,Social issues ,Ambivalence ,Social psychology - Abstract
Whilst previous studies have mostly portrayed leaders’ interpretations of social issues as either positive or negative, in this study, we focus on leaders’ ambivalent interpretations of social issu...
- Published
- 2019
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45. Responsible Business in Myanmar: Comparing Perceptions from Domestic and Foreign Firms
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Jason Miklian and Ralf Barkemeyer
- Subjects
International investment ,Isolation (health care) ,business.industry ,Corporate social responsibility ,General Medicine ,International trade ,business - Abstract
After decades of isolation, Myanmar opened up its economy to international trade in 2012. This opening led to a rapid influx of international investment, exposure to the “international CSR communit...
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- 2019
- Full Text
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46. Evolutionary Pathways of Environmental Management in UK Companies
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Marta Ormazabal, Ralf Barkemeyer, Elisabeth Viles, Jose María Sarriegi, and Faye McAnulla
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business.industry ,Strategy and Management ,media_common.quotation_subject ,fungi ,05 social sciences ,Environmental resource management ,People Capability Maturity Model ,010501 environmental sciences ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Development ,01 natural sciences ,Maturity (finance) ,Order (exchange) ,0502 economics and business ,Conceptual model ,Business ,Marketing ,050203 business & management ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,media_common - Abstract
This research focuses on the evolution of environmental management within firms. It is based on a survey and semi-structured interviews conducted among UK companies. Building on an evolutionary conceptual model, consisting of several maturity stages, we identify ‘milestones’, i.e. common practices companies engage in when progressing through specific maturity stages. Whilst clear commonalities can be identified, most notably linked to the order of maturity stages they progressed through and the emergence of commonly acknowledged practices linked to the individual maturity stages, the results also reveal a number of within-sample patterns regarding the companies’ progression through the different maturity stages. It can be concluded that the maturity stages and practices identified in this research can provide valuable guidance for firms aiming to make progress in environmental matters, as they help them to identify in which maturity stage they are and sets out steps that they can take to move forward. Copyright © 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Exploring the Relationship between Sustainability Reporting and Sustainability Management Practices
- Author
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Ana Moreno-Romero, Ralf Barkemeyer, and Diego Pérez-López
- Subjects
business.industry ,Strategy and Management ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Social sustainability ,Accounting ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Corporate sustainability ,Order (exchange) ,Sustainability ,Sustainability reporting ,Corporate social responsibility ,Sustainability organizations ,Business and International Management ,Marketing ,business ,Diversity (business) - Abstract
There has been a dramatic uptake of sustainability reporting (SR) and sustainability management practices over the last two decades, in turn raising questions about the relationship between external disclosure and internal practice of corporate sustainability. Previous literature has emphasized the role of external pressures in driving SR adoption. However, as recent practitioner surveys also identify the existence of internal motives for SR, a more comprehensive analysis of this relationship is needed. In order to address this issue, we develop a framework accounting for four company-level SR configurations, resulting from different levels of importance of external and internal motives for SR. Then, four exploratory cases serve to illustrate these configurations and to describe the respective roles of SR at the company level. As considerable diversity among these SR practices is found, our findings point to the relevance of both external and internal motives in understanding SR contribution to corporate sustainability. Copyright © 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Sustainability reporting: The role of 'Search', 'Experience' and 'Credence' information
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Tobias Hahn, Ralf Barkemeyer, Frank Figge, and Breeda Comyns
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business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Credence ,Accounting ,Corporate sustainability ,Accountability ,Sustainability ,Sustainability reporting ,Economics ,Quality (business) ,Sustainability organizations ,Marketing ,business ,Finance ,Legitimacy ,media_common - Abstract
Corporate sustainability reporting quality has been frequently criticised as being unbalanced, presenting an overly positive view or failing to address material issues. The purpose of this article is to provide a fresh explanation for poor quality sustainability reporting and to propose how quality issues may be addressed. The theoretical framework combines the legitimacy and accountability perspectives using Akerlof's (1970) Market for Lemons theory. Akerlof's approach is extended by differentiating between three types of information in sustainability reports namely search, experience and credence. The article concludes that the type of information must be considered when determining measures to improve report quality.
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- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Sustainability-Related Media Coverage and Socioeconomic Development: A Regional and North–South Perspective
- Author
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Frank Figge, Diane Holt, and Ralf Barkemeyer
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Sustainable development ,Economic growth ,Public Administration ,Poverty ,Corruption ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Socioeconomic development ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) ,Gross domestic product ,Geography ,Development economics ,Sustainability ,Per capita ,Human Development Index ,media_common - Abstract
With this paper we discuss the differences between sustainability-related media agendas across different countries and regions. Utilising a sample of 115 leading national newspapers covering forty-one countries, we show that typically no homogeneous global trends exist with regard to sustainability-related media agendas. Instead, significant differences exist regarding the national-level prioritisations of sustainability-related issues in the countries under review. To some extent, these observed differences can be attributed to different levels of socioeconomic development as measured by Human Development Index scores and gross domestic product per capita. Here, generic differences can be identified between newspapers from the Global North and South, with a range of issues such as climate change emerging as typically Northern issues, whereas issues such as corruption and poverty show significantly higher levels of coverage across newspapers from the Global South. We conclude with a discussion of the results in the context of global environmental governance. Keywords: sustainable development, media agendas, text mining, broadsheet newspapers, environmental sustainability, socioeconomic sustainability, Human Development Index
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Linguistic analysis of IPCC summaries for policymakers and associated coverage
- Author
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Giulio Napolitano, Suraje Dessai, Ralf Barkemeyer, B. M. Monge-Sanz, Barbara Gabriella Renzi, and Kedge Business School (Kedge BS)
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010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Sentiment analysis ,010501 environmental sciences ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) ,Public relations ,01 natural sciences ,Readability ,Newspaper ,Variety (cybernetics) ,[SHS]Humanities and Social Sciences ,Presentation ,Emotive ,Political science ,Quality (business) ,business ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,media_common ,Mass media - Abstract
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Summary for Policymakers (SPM) is the most widely read section of IPCC reports and the main springboard for the communication of its assessment reports. Previous studies have shown that communicating IPCC findings to a variety of scientific and non-scientific audiences presents significant challenges to both the IPCC and the mass media. Here, we employ widely established sentiment analysis tools and readability metrics to explore the extent to which information published by the IPCC differs from the presentation of respective findings in the popular and scientific media between 1990 and 2014. IPCC SPMs clearly stand out in terms of low readability, which has remained relatively constant despite the IPCC’s efforts to consolidate and readjust its communications policy. In contrast, scientific and quality newspaper coverage has become increasingly readable and emotive. Our findings reveal easy gains that could be achieved in making SPMs more accessible for non-scientific audiences. The IPCC summaries written for policymakers are meant to communicate findings to a wide audience. Textual analysis shows that these reports continue to have low readability, in contrast with media coverage.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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