Getting to zero : a field-level perspective on organizational transitions towards carbon neutrality

Climate change policies are proliferating at a local and regional level. Within this landscape, organizational climate change action is shifting from voluntary to mandated, and organizations are grappling with new pressures to reduce their environmental impact. This dissertation explores organizatio...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Piggot, Georgia Jean
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2017
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/64143
id ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-64143
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-641432018-01-05T17:30:15Z Getting to zero : a field-level perspective on organizational transitions towards carbon neutrality Piggot, Georgia Jean Climate change policies are proliferating at a local and regional level. Within this landscape, organizational climate change action is shifting from voluntary to mandated, and organizations are grappling with new pressures to reduce their environmental impact. This dissertation explores organizational responses to climate change policy, though a field-level analysis of 132 organizations that were required to achieve carbon neutrality in British Columbia, Canada. The strategies organizations adopted or considered over a five-year period from the policy inception are examined using survey data and a content analysis of annual reports. This study shows that the organizations bound by the carbon neutral mandate quickly came to a common understanding of what the practical expression of carbon neutrality involved. Within five years of the policy introduction, and three years of the requirement to become carbon neutral, organizations were considering or adopting a large number of similar strategies in response to the legislative requirement to reduce their carbon emissions. This convergence of strategies can be explained by several factors. First, organizations drew cues about appropriate responses from the government, and from other organizations within the field, leading to isomorphism of strategies over time. Second, the organizations were working under a common set of institutional logics, or cultural assumptions about the rationale for pursuing strategies, leading them to consider the same practices appropriate for meeting carbon neutral goals. Finally, organizations were supported by similar networks of organizations, centralizing the field around a few key actors. Similarity in responses to the mandate to achieve carbon neutrality are reflective of the fact that organizations drew from the common sources of information and resources to meet emissions reduction targets. This work demonstrates that organizational responses to climate policy should be understood with reference to the field in which organizations are embedded, rather than simply as the sum of individual organizational actions. It also highlights the fact that if the institutional and cultural conditions are right, organizational fields can rapidly emerge and adapt to new policy imperatives to tackle climate change. Arts, Faculty of Sociology, Department of Graduate 2017-12-22T18:15:47Z 2017-12-22T18:15:47Z 2017 2018-02 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/64143 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description Climate change policies are proliferating at a local and regional level. Within this landscape, organizational climate change action is shifting from voluntary to mandated, and organizations are grappling with new pressures to reduce their environmental impact. This dissertation explores organizational responses to climate change policy, though a field-level analysis of 132 organizations that were required to achieve carbon neutrality in British Columbia, Canada. The strategies organizations adopted or considered over a five-year period from the policy inception are examined using survey data and a content analysis of annual reports. This study shows that the organizations bound by the carbon neutral mandate quickly came to a common understanding of what the practical expression of carbon neutrality involved. Within five years of the policy introduction, and three years of the requirement to become carbon neutral, organizations were considering or adopting a large number of similar strategies in response to the legislative requirement to reduce their carbon emissions. This convergence of strategies can be explained by several factors. First, organizations drew cues about appropriate responses from the government, and from other organizations within the field, leading to isomorphism of strategies over time. Second, the organizations were working under a common set of institutional logics, or cultural assumptions about the rationale for pursuing strategies, leading them to consider the same practices appropriate for meeting carbon neutral goals. Finally, organizations were supported by similar networks of organizations, centralizing the field around a few key actors. Similarity in responses to the mandate to achieve carbon neutrality are reflective of the fact that organizations drew from the common sources of information and resources to meet emissions reduction targets. This work demonstrates that organizational responses to climate policy should be understood with reference to the field in which organizations are embedded, rather than simply as the sum of individual organizational actions. It also highlights the fact that if the institutional and cultural conditions are right, organizational fields can rapidly emerge and adapt to new policy imperatives to tackle climate change. === Arts, Faculty of === Sociology, Department of === Graduate
author Piggot, Georgia Jean
spellingShingle Piggot, Georgia Jean
Getting to zero : a field-level perspective on organizational transitions towards carbon neutrality
author_facet Piggot, Georgia Jean
author_sort Piggot, Georgia Jean
title Getting to zero : a field-level perspective on organizational transitions towards carbon neutrality
title_short Getting to zero : a field-level perspective on organizational transitions towards carbon neutrality
title_full Getting to zero : a field-level perspective on organizational transitions towards carbon neutrality
title_fullStr Getting to zero : a field-level perspective on organizational transitions towards carbon neutrality
title_full_unstemmed Getting to zero : a field-level perspective on organizational transitions towards carbon neutrality
title_sort getting to zero : a field-level perspective on organizational transitions towards carbon neutrality
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/64143
work_keys_str_mv AT piggotgeorgiajean gettingtozeroafieldlevelperspectiveonorganizationaltransitionstowardscarbonneutrality
_version_ 1718586053915312128