Publication | Closed Access
Substantive or Symbolic Environmental Strategies? Effects of External and Internal Normative Stakeholder Pressures
188
Citations
122
References
2017
Year
Environmental PerformanceNatural EnvironmentEngineeringEnvironmental Impact AssessmentSustainable DevelopmentLawEnvironmental PlanningGreen PolicyStakeholder AnalysisEnvironmental EthicsEnvironmental PolicyStakeholder PressuresManagementStakeholder EngagementEnvironmental ManagementReflexive Environmental GovernanceEnvironmental GovernancePublic PolicyStakeholder DemandsCorporate Social ResponsibilitySymbolic Environmental StrategiesOrganization-environment RelationshipBusinessPro-environmental BehaviorDifferent Environmental Strategies
Abstract Different forms of stakeholder pressures drive different environmental strategies in organizations. This article differentiates between internal and external normative stakeholder pressures to test their potentially unique effects on environmental strategies. The findings suggest that internal, normative stakeholder pressures primarily drive substantive commitments to environmental practices, reflecting an internalized, voluntary commitment to the natural environment and dedication to environmental leadership by the firm. External, normative pressures instead primarily drive symbolic commitments to environmental practices, aimed at managing the image of the organization to establish and reinforce an appearance of commitment to the natural environment. This novel perspective accounts for the institutionally plural contexts of organizations and their environments, in which internal pressures directly drive substantive environmental commitments and external pressures drive symbolic responses. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment
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