Social Sustainability Work in Product Development Organizations: An Empirical Study of Three Sweden-Based Companies

Companies responsible for product development (PD) and manufacturing play an important role in supporting society in achieving sustainability, and yet they do not always include full sustainability considerations in PD decisions. The<i> </i>social dimension of sustainability has been lar...

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Main Authors: Patricia Lagun Mesquita, Merlina Missimer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-02-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/4/1986
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spelling doaj-f8bafbc8bcdf4a8ca29b9b29663767d42021-02-13T00:01:17ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502021-02-01131986198610.3390/su13041986Social Sustainability Work in Product Development Organizations: An Empirical Study of Three Sweden-Based CompaniesPatricia Lagun Mesquita0Merlina Missimer1Department of Strategic Sustainable Development, Blekinge Institute of Technology, SE-37179 Karlskrona, SwedenDepartment of Strategic Sustainable Development, Blekinge Institute of Technology, SE-37179 Karlskrona, SwedenCompanies responsible for product development (PD) and manufacturing play an important role in supporting society in achieving sustainability, and yet they do not always include full sustainability considerations in PD decisions. The<i> </i>social dimension of sustainability has been largely neglected in the PD field and there is very little empirical evidence of<i> </i>social sustainability implementation in general. The aim of this paper is to investigate how social sustainability is currently included in PD organizations and what their motivations are to do so. Results from a comparative case study approach with three organizations include rich descriptions across four dimensions: The scope of the work and their view of interdependencies with other social systems, their definition of social sustainability and the issues they work with, what guides strategic decisions, and how this internal work is structured. The results reveal that the three product development organizations are heterogenous in their approaches to social sustainability and that the more advanced approach shows a better understanding of the complexity of social sustainability and a broader perspective of its interdependencies, which goes hand-in-hand with a way of organizing that overcomes traditional hierarchies and allows for more collaborative and strategic work in this area. This systems perspective also drives what issues are included in an organization’s work; scope and definition of social sustainability become more encompassing and aligned. Finally, our study shows that social sustainability impacts connected to products’ lifecycles, when addressed, are done so by functions outside design activities, as opposed to product developers. A greater understanding of how companies currently approach social sustainability and what challenges they might face in integrating it in organizational and design related practices has been called for; our paper contributes to this but acknowledges that more work is needed.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/4/1986social sustainabilityproduct developmentstrategic sustainable developmentcase study
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patricia Lagun Mesquita
Merlina Missimer
spellingShingle Patricia Lagun Mesquita
Merlina Missimer
Social Sustainability Work in Product Development Organizations: An Empirical Study of Three Sweden-Based Companies
Sustainability
social sustainability
product development
strategic sustainable development
case study
author_facet Patricia Lagun Mesquita
Merlina Missimer
author_sort Patricia Lagun Mesquita
title Social Sustainability Work in Product Development Organizations: An Empirical Study of Three Sweden-Based Companies
title_short Social Sustainability Work in Product Development Organizations: An Empirical Study of Three Sweden-Based Companies
title_full Social Sustainability Work in Product Development Organizations: An Empirical Study of Three Sweden-Based Companies
title_fullStr Social Sustainability Work in Product Development Organizations: An Empirical Study of Three Sweden-Based Companies
title_full_unstemmed Social Sustainability Work in Product Development Organizations: An Empirical Study of Three Sweden-Based Companies
title_sort social sustainability work in product development organizations: an empirical study of three sweden-based companies
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Companies responsible for product development (PD) and manufacturing play an important role in supporting society in achieving sustainability, and yet they do not always include full sustainability considerations in PD decisions. The<i> </i>social dimension of sustainability has been largely neglected in the PD field and there is very little empirical evidence of<i> </i>social sustainability implementation in general. The aim of this paper is to investigate how social sustainability is currently included in PD organizations and what their motivations are to do so. Results from a comparative case study approach with three organizations include rich descriptions across four dimensions: The scope of the work and their view of interdependencies with other social systems, their definition of social sustainability and the issues they work with, what guides strategic decisions, and how this internal work is structured. The results reveal that the three product development organizations are heterogenous in their approaches to social sustainability and that the more advanced approach shows a better understanding of the complexity of social sustainability and a broader perspective of its interdependencies, which goes hand-in-hand with a way of organizing that overcomes traditional hierarchies and allows for more collaborative and strategic work in this area. This systems perspective also drives what issues are included in an organization’s work; scope and definition of social sustainability become more encompassing and aligned. Finally, our study shows that social sustainability impacts connected to products’ lifecycles, when addressed, are done so by functions outside design activities, as opposed to product developers. A greater understanding of how companies currently approach social sustainability and what challenges they might face in integrating it in organizational and design related practices has been called for; our paper contributes to this but acknowledges that more work is needed.
topic social sustainability
product development
strategic sustainable development
case study
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/4/1986
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