Social Sustainability in Business Organizations: A Research Agenda
Abstract
:1. Field Overview
1.1. Social Sustainability in Business Management
1.2. Social Sustainability in Product Development
1.3. Social Sustainability in Supply Chains
2. Synthesis and the Research Agenda Moving Forward
- Poor definition of social sustainability [34,35,57,58,59,60,61,76,80,81,82]: Much of the literature in the field shies away from precisely defining the concept of social sustainability. This lack of definition becomes a circular problem that leads to less and less clarity, as the lack of a definition makes the field fuzzy, and leads to issues such as the ones below. Although we acknowledge the impossibility of agreeing on a single vision for a socially sustainable society, scholars can and should attempt more convergence on some key pieces, and not shy away from this discussion to counteract the negative consequences below that arise from this lack of clarity.
- Picking (sometimes seemingly random) issues [32,34,39,76,80]: Poor definition leads to random inclusion of issues and often context-specificness or subjectivity in issue inclusion, which complicates achieving convergence on what social sustainability is, as scholars build on each other´s work. The first two problems enable organizations in claiming that they are progressing in the field of social sustainability when they are tackling issues individually or not at all. Since social problems are often highly interrelated, tackling them in isolation may lead to worse social situations in the long run.
- Lack of systems and the science-based understanding of social sustainability and goal-setting [38,45,46,64,65,66,67,69,70]: While this challenge is also pointed out in the ecological sustainability field, it is especially prevalent in the social sustainability field, because systems-based approaches remain rare and even contentious. However, without a systematic understanding of the larger challenge, it is again difficult to claim that we are advancing in the field, and goals remain ad hoc and too narrow, and are rarely strategic.
- Lack of ability to deal with (conflicts and tradeoffs between) issues strategically [88,89]: the lack of clarity also leads to an inability to strategically decide on which issues to focus and how to deal with potential conflicts, potentially creating unnecessary competition between issues over scarce resources such as time and money. In the worst case, this means that a particular issue is selected on the basis of its proponents being the loudest rather than because it is most material to the organization in the larger picture.
- Lack of clarity how to best use existing tools [34,57,58,59,60,61,80]: The same challenge as with issues applies to selection of support tools in social sustainability work. There is no shortage of tools that help in addressing social sustainability issues. However, without a general, systematic, and systemic understanding of the challenge, it is difficult to assess which tool is right for which purpose, and how they could be optimally combined to achieve the greatest results.
- Limited research on structures and processes for implementation and integration [49,50,51,52]: The academic body of knowledge regarding actual implementation of social sustainability is scare. There is unfortunately not much systematic understanding of structures and processes that transforms ideas into tangible outputs.
- Fragmented organizational structure hinderance to collaboration on these issues [24,26]: The little we know from existing research is that often the organizational structure itself is an obstacle to achieving social sustainability goals. As these goals often go across departments and focus areas, collaboration is key in achieving results. Due to the rigidity of existing organization structures, this is often not possible effectively. When organizational structures are in place to deal with sustainability goals, they often embrace mostly ecological aspects, possibly due to a narrow definition of sustainability, and social aspects are dealt with by a range of departments, e.g., human resources, purchasing, and environmental, health and safety (EHS) without a unifying strategy to align the work.
- Lack of true integration rather than stand-alone and add-on approaches and tools [47,48,67,68]: The above challenges then lead to initiatives being added on to the existing processes and structures rather than being truly integrated. This leads to social sustainability issues being yet another set of issues to consider on a very long list and also often misses possible synergies or true transformations.
2.1. Towards a Clearer Definition of Social Sustainability Based on a (Systems) Science Understanding and Deriving Goals Thereof
2.2. Practice-Based Research on Sustainability Integration: Structures and Processes with a Focus on Dynamically Overcoming Systemic Challenges
3. Concluding Remarks
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Missimer, M.; Mesquita, P.L. Social Sustainability in Business Organizations: A Research Agenda. Sustainability 2022, 14, 2608. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14052608
Missimer M, Mesquita PL. Social Sustainability in Business Organizations: A Research Agenda. Sustainability. 2022; 14(5):2608. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14052608
Chicago/Turabian StyleMissimer, Merlina, and Patricia Lagun Mesquita. 2022. "Social Sustainability in Business Organizations: A Research Agenda" Sustainability 14, no. 5: 2608. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14052608