Managerial Tensions for Sustainability in the Mongolian Mining Industry. Academy of Management.

Item Type Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)
Abstract This qualitative study of managers in the Mongolian mining industry examines the anteceding motivations and attitudinal consequences of conflicting managerial value orientations in the context of corporate sustainability. Grounding our insights in interviews with 28 mining managers, we find that tensions arise when managers hold apparently conflicting value orientations and act on these in the context of multiple institutional logics. In addition, managers experience a sharp conflict between their personal values and their professional roles as organizational decision-makers. We find that these tensions are not only driven by intrinsic values and instrumental motives for corporate sustainability, but also by the managers’ family upbringing and Mongolian identity. The managerial tensions are consequently manifested in managers’ individual affect and cognition towards corporate sustainability, and that the corporate sustainability actions can serve as a form of (individual-level) catharsis for them. These insights contribute to the paradox view of understanding tensions in corporate sustainability.
Authors Ng, Eunice; Walls, Judith & Ganchimeg, Wingard
Language English
Subjects business studies
information management
Date 9 July 2018
Publisher Academy of Management Proceedings
Depositing User Prof. Dr. Judith Louise Walls
Date Deposited 15 Dec 2019 15:01
Last Modified 17 Dec 2019 14:47
URI: https://www.alexandria.unisg.ch/publications/258724

Download

Full text not available from this repository.

Citation

Ng, Eunice; Walls, Judith & Ganchimeg, Wingard: Managerial Tensions for Sustainability in the Mongolian Mining Industry. Academy of Management. 2018.

Statistics

https://www.alexandria.unisg.ch/id/eprint/258724
Edit item Edit item
Feedback?