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Environmentalism and corporate sustainability

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNEntry for encyclopedia/dictionary

Published

Standard

Environmentalism and corporate sustainability. / Kennedy, Steve; Whiteman, Gail.
Wiley Encyclopaedia of Management. Vol. 6 3rd ed. ed. Wiley, 2015.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNEntry for encyclopedia/dictionary

Harvard

Kennedy, S & Whiteman, G 2015, Environmentalism and corporate sustainability. in Wiley Encyclopaedia of Management. 3rd ed. edn, vol. 6, Wiley. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781118785317.weom060072

APA

Kennedy, S., & Whiteman, G. (2015). Environmentalism and corporate sustainability. In Wiley Encyclopaedia of Management (3rd ed. ed., Vol. 6). Wiley. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781118785317.weom060072

Vancouver

Kennedy S, Whiteman G. Environmentalism and corporate sustainability. In Wiley Encyclopaedia of Management. 3rd ed. ed. Vol. 6. Wiley. 2015 doi: 10.1002/9781118785317.weom060072

Author

Kennedy, Steve ; Whiteman, Gail. / Environmentalism and corporate sustainability. Wiley Encyclopaedia of Management. Vol. 6 3rd ed. ed. Wiley, 2015.

Bibtex

@inbook{a93367918cdc4d42a012694a484162af,
title = "Environmentalism and corporate sustainability",
abstract = "Environmentalism refers to the advocacy of the conservation and restoration of the natural world. It may be considered as a broad philosophy or ideology of a political, ethical, and social movement concerned by the degradation of the natural environment because of human activity. Its modern conceptualization is rooted in the time of the industrial revolution (circa 1750–1850) and has developed through debates concerning both the intrinsic value of nature and the limits to growth imposed by scarcity of natural resources. Concerns of climate change among others have seen environmentalism become mainstream, with the related sustainable development dominating international agendas.Business has now taken the helm of the discourse through a combination of societal pressure, a shift in power away from governments, and an emergence of environmental market-based solutions. Engaged in “New Corporate Environmentalism” business is seeking to balance its drive for profit with ecological goals. A current paradox of increasing efforts but continued failure to stop environmental degradation, however, indicates that a more holistic approach is needed refocusing efforts on dealing with planetary boundary processes.",
keywords = "environmentalism, limits to growth, sustainability, corporate environmentalism, greening, planetary boundaries",
author = "Steve Kennedy and Gail Whiteman",
year = "2015",
month = jan,
day = "21",
doi = "10.1002/9781118785317.weom060072",
language = "English",
volume = "6",
booktitle = "Wiley Encyclopaedia of Management",
publisher = "Wiley",
edition = "3rd ed.",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Environmentalism and corporate sustainability

AU - Kennedy, Steve

AU - Whiteman, Gail

PY - 2015/1/21

Y1 - 2015/1/21

N2 - Environmentalism refers to the advocacy of the conservation and restoration of the natural world. It may be considered as a broad philosophy or ideology of a political, ethical, and social movement concerned by the degradation of the natural environment because of human activity. Its modern conceptualization is rooted in the time of the industrial revolution (circa 1750–1850) and has developed through debates concerning both the intrinsic value of nature and the limits to growth imposed by scarcity of natural resources. Concerns of climate change among others have seen environmentalism become mainstream, with the related sustainable development dominating international agendas.Business has now taken the helm of the discourse through a combination of societal pressure, a shift in power away from governments, and an emergence of environmental market-based solutions. Engaged in “New Corporate Environmentalism” business is seeking to balance its drive for profit with ecological goals. A current paradox of increasing efforts but continued failure to stop environmental degradation, however, indicates that a more holistic approach is needed refocusing efforts on dealing with planetary boundary processes.

AB - Environmentalism refers to the advocacy of the conservation and restoration of the natural world. It may be considered as a broad philosophy or ideology of a political, ethical, and social movement concerned by the degradation of the natural environment because of human activity. Its modern conceptualization is rooted in the time of the industrial revolution (circa 1750–1850) and has developed through debates concerning both the intrinsic value of nature and the limits to growth imposed by scarcity of natural resources. Concerns of climate change among others have seen environmentalism become mainstream, with the related sustainable development dominating international agendas.Business has now taken the helm of the discourse through a combination of societal pressure, a shift in power away from governments, and an emergence of environmental market-based solutions. Engaged in “New Corporate Environmentalism” business is seeking to balance its drive for profit with ecological goals. A current paradox of increasing efforts but continued failure to stop environmental degradation, however, indicates that a more holistic approach is needed refocusing efforts on dealing with planetary boundary processes.

KW - environmentalism

KW - limits to growth

KW - sustainability

KW - corporate environmentalism

KW - greening

KW - planetary boundaries

U2 - 10.1002/9781118785317.weom060072

DO - 10.1002/9781118785317.weom060072

M3 - Entry for encyclopedia/dictionary

VL - 6

BT - Wiley Encyclopaedia of Management

PB - Wiley

ER -