Introduction
Example: electric car, batteries controversial due to human-rioghts violations along the supply chain
Definition of a Tension
Tensions are everywhere in sustainable systems however managers do not manage them in the same way -> we can distinguish thess perspectives
A tension is a competing demand between or within the different dimensions of sustainability, such as economic, social or environmental aspects
Tensions are inherent in sustainability problems and are fundamental to our understanding of sustainability -> e.g. packaging more environmental friendly but costs more -> tension between environmental and economic belongings
Next to the tensions arising between different diemsntions of sustainability, tensions can also arise over time and space
Time: i.e. Resources used today bs. the availability of resources in the future -> e.g. projects on climate change long-term benefits but less benficial on short-time scale
Spatial: i.e. local impact vs. global impact -> e.g. on global perspective GHG emissions need to be avoided but however, on local scale may be unavoidable if food production relise on fossil fuels
Win-Win Perspective
most straight forward, economic perspective, not prioritizing environment
The win-win perspective suggests that financial profitability can be easily aligned with the social and/or environmental dimenstions of sustainability
From the win-win perspective, sustainability experts or may not recognize the tensions inherent in sustainability, but in either case they will engage in sustainability only if it is financially beneficial
This perspective deals with tensions by demonstrating the business case for sustainability, i.e. showing clearly the financial returns of investing in sustainability initiative
e.g. instaling PV to lower dependencies on fossil fuels
But some may be overlooked by only focusing on simple solutions
Trade-off Perspective
difficult, decision needs to be taken, favours only one sustainability area
The trade-off perspective is an exchange of one benefit for another benefit that is seen as most desirable
Thus, this perspective suggests that managers must choose between two competing demands with ont sustainability aspect being prioritized over the other
e.g. clothing retailer donates clothes to developing countries and therefore prioritizing the environmental benefits over the social damages
For that, an extensive assessment of the impacts of the two alternatives is desirable to make the best decision possible -> imediate and more long term impact
Paradoxical Perspective
most complex, let tensions insist, implement strategies to work along the tensions, more innovative, more transformation
the paradox perspective does not force a choice and rather pushed firms to innovate ways to reconcile several sustainability aspects over time
By maintaining the tensions, managers learn to understand the complexity of the competing demands and work through the tension rather than resolving it
Acknowledging that competing demand can coexist over time can also bring about additional benefits such as innovation, creativity and employee commitment
e.g. for clothing retailer this would mean that it sccepts the tension and tries to lower consumption in industrial countries and to improve local clothing industry in developing countries
e.g. plastic waste in ocean:
trade-off perspective: still use plastic because its cheap
paradoxical: recognize the problem and look for innovative solutions
Zuletzt geändertvor einem Jahr