Options
Nina Zachlod
Last Name
Zachlod
First name
Nina
Email
nina.zachlod@unisg.ch
ORCID
Phone
+41 71 224 72121
Now showing
1 - 10 of 10
-
PublicationType: conference paper
-
PublicationPower Relations and Resilience: The Implications of Calls for Justice Among the (Un)Resilient( 2024)Michael HudecheckThis paper examines the implications of asymmetric power relations on resilience. Organizations located in developing regions are affected by the unequal distribution of resources. In extreme cases, such as for those located in small island developing states (SIDS), where the conflux of resource import dependencies and climate change pose existential threats, organizations rely on the ability of their host governments to negotiate favorable policies and resource redistribution outcomes in order to resolve distributive injustices and guarantee their long-term survival. This paper uses a multiple streams approach to examine how SIDS leverage narratives at the United Nations (UN) to combat asymmetric power relations, realize positive policy outcomes, and obtain climate financing. We first analyze argumentation across all dimensions of the discourse with a focus on obtaining resources to reduce their vulnerability and associated distributive injustices. We then explore the validity of our discourse analysis through a quantitative analysis of 2,922 UN General Assembly resolutions from 1975 to 2022. We find that SIDS narratives insufficiently realize positive resource redistribution outcomes, that many SIDS members situationally defect from cohesive voting actions, and that power asymmetries were not remediated. We extend organizational theory by exploring the relationship between extreme asymmetric power disparities and resilience.Type: conference paperJournal: Academy of Management ProceedingsIssue: 1
-
PublicationSatellite Data as an Emerging Method for Organizational Research: A Detailed Overview and Use Case( 2024)
;Michael HudecheckGerard GeorgeWe introduce satellite data as a new data source for organizational research. Organizational theory is increasingly used to explain large scale ecological and environmental challenges. However, organizational researchers lack the appropriate data sources and methods to properly investigate grand societal challenges at scale. Satellite data is accurate, offers near-real-time availability, resolves information asymmetries, and is increasingly cost effective and user friendly, making it a lucrative source of information. We delve into the strengths and limitations of this new type of data, discuss various data sources, types, and associated methods, and highlight its potential through an illustrative use case, which explores the effects of sustainability certification implementation among Malaysian palm oil plantations. Through our use case, we find that sustainability certifications may encourage inefficient land use, which runs counter to existing findings in organizational and management research. In doing so, we hope to stimulate interest in the adoption of this method among organizational and management research.Type: conference paperJournal: Academy of Management ProceedingsIssue: 1 -
PublicationType: conference paperVolume: Shortlisted for Relevant and Responsible Research Award
-
PublicationType: conference paper
-
-
PublicationType: conference contribution
-
PublicationType: conference contribution
-
PublicationType: conference poster
-
PublicationType: conference poster