File(s) under permanent embargo
To the letter vs the spirit: a case analysis of contrasting environmental management responses
journal contribution
posted on 2018-02-20, 00:00 authored by Campbell HeggenCampbell Heggen, V G Sridharan, N SubramaniamPurpose
The purpose of this paper is to examine why firms governed by the same environmental management standards within an industry exhibit contrasting responses, with some adhering to the letter and others achieving the spirit behind the standards.
Design/methodology/approach
Using Arena et al. (2010) as an analytical schema to examine the institutional dynamics behind such contrasting responses, the paper analyses archival and interview data relating to firm strategy, control technology and human expertise in two contrasting Australian forestry firms.
Findings
The embedding and decoupling of environmental standards with a firm’s environmental management practices is influenced, first, by the extent to which founder directors and senior management integrate environmental responsibility with the underlying business motives and, second, by the use of organisational beliefs and values systems to institutionalise the integrated strategic rationality throughout the firm. Finally, informed by the institutionalised strategic rationality, the participation and expertise of actors across the organisational hierarchy determine the level to which the design and execution of the eco-control technologies move beyond merely monitoring compliance, and act to facilitate continuous improvement, knowledge integration and organisational learning at the operational level.
Originality/value
This paper responds to institutional theorists’ call for a holistic explanation that considers the interactions among several intra-organisational factors to explain the dynamics behind why some firms decouple while others do not, even though the firms exist in the same social and regulatory context.
The purpose of this paper is to examine why firms governed by the same environmental management standards within an industry exhibit contrasting responses, with some adhering to the letter and others achieving the spirit behind the standards.
Design/methodology/approach
Using Arena et al. (2010) as an analytical schema to examine the institutional dynamics behind such contrasting responses, the paper analyses archival and interview data relating to firm strategy, control technology and human expertise in two contrasting Australian forestry firms.
Findings
The embedding and decoupling of environmental standards with a firm’s environmental management practices is influenced, first, by the extent to which founder directors and senior management integrate environmental responsibility with the underlying business motives and, second, by the use of organisational beliefs and values systems to institutionalise the integrated strategic rationality throughout the firm. Finally, informed by the institutionalised strategic rationality, the participation and expertise of actors across the organisational hierarchy determine the level to which the design and execution of the eco-control technologies move beyond merely monitoring compliance, and act to facilitate continuous improvement, knowledge integration and organisational learning at the operational level.
Originality/value
This paper responds to institutional theorists’ call for a holistic explanation that considers the interactions among several intra-organisational factors to explain the dynamics behind why some firms decouple while others do not, even though the firms exist in the same social and regulatory context.
History
Journal
Accounting, Auditing & Accountability JournalVolume
31Issue
2Pagination
478 - 502Publisher
Emerald PublishingLocation
Bingley, Eng.Publisher DOI
ISSN
0951-3574Language
engPublication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal; C Journal articleCopyright notice
2018, Emerald PublishingUsage metrics
Categories
No categories selectedKeywords
environmental accountingenvironmental management systemseco-controlsenvironmental certification standardsenvironmental responsibilityenvironmental strategySocial SciencesBusiness, FinanceBusiness & EconomicsCONTROL-SYSTEMSCORPORATEPERFORMANCESTRATEGYORGANIZATIONSCERTIFICATIONIMPACTRATIONALITYISOMORPHISMPERSPECTIVE