Corporate responses to government and environmental group actions designed to protect the environment

The pressure on corporations to manage their operations in an environmentally responsible manner has increased rapidly in the last decade. These pressures are especially intense for resource-based companies. In the province of British Columbia, environmental policy, which is the basis of many for...

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Main Author: Raizada, Rachana
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/8658
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-86582018-01-05T17:34:21Z Corporate responses to government and environmental group actions designed to protect the environment Raizada, Rachana MacMillan Bloedel Limited Canadian Forest Products Ltd Forests and forestry - Environmental aspects - British Columbia - Case studies Forest policy - British Columbia The pressure on corporations to manage their operations in an environmentally responsible manner has increased rapidly in the last decade. These pressures are especially intense for resource-based companies. In the province of British Columbia, environmental policy, which is the basis of many forms of intervention by the provincial government, constitutes a significant constraint on the operations of forest companies. Diverse environmental group campaigns addressing issues such as preservation of temperate coastal rainforest, forest management practices, and air and water pollution by pulp and paper mills, have contributed to intensifying the environmental pressures on companies. Yet it is apparent that forest companies in B.C. which face similar competitive conditions and are regulated by the same environmental policies have responded differently. The research question addressed in this study was "Why do corporate responses to government and environmental group actions designed to protect the environment differ between corporations?" The research question was examined through the use of a comparative case study research strategy. Two B.C.-based companies which showed prima facie evidence of having divergent responses to environmental pressures were chosen for the study. Data was collected on government and environmental group actions on environmental issues for the period 1983 to 1997 to determine the substantive nature of the issues faced by corporations and to trace their evolution over the period covered by the study. Data on corporate responses between 1983 and 1997 was collected through interviews, newspaper reports, and corporate documents. The data was analyzed through a framework based on four theories of organization. Four models were specified in terms of their unit of analysis, organizing concepts, dominant inference patterns, and propositions: the rational choice model; the institutional model; the bureaucratic model; and the leadership model. The case studies demonstrated that while some government actions had distinct effects on the companies, and though one was the target of interest group actions more intensively and frequently than the other, the general operating and regulatory environment of the companies was more similar than it was distinct. Analyzing organizational characteristics with the use of the theoretical framework accounted for much of the difference in response. The rational model was not generally supported except in limited decision-making situations. The institutional model explained corporate stance in terms of the content and sources of institutional pressures. The bureaucratic model explained organizational output by illustrating how structural characteristics affected issues of goal setting and implementation of responses. The leadership model explained the extent to which changes in corporate strategy resulted from different types of leadership behaviour, subject to situational constraints. The four models were then integrated to derive some theoretical implications for academic research and some managerial implications for corporate managers. Business, Sauder School of Graduate 2009-06-02T21:01:42Z 2009-06-02T21:01:42Z 1998 1998-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/8658 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 19642026 bytes application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic MacMillan Bloedel Limited
Canadian Forest Products Ltd
Forests and forestry - Environmental aspects - British Columbia - Case studies
Forest policy - British Columbia
spellingShingle MacMillan Bloedel Limited
Canadian Forest Products Ltd
Forests and forestry - Environmental aspects - British Columbia - Case studies
Forest policy - British Columbia
Raizada, Rachana
Corporate responses to government and environmental group actions designed to protect the environment
description The pressure on corporations to manage their operations in an environmentally responsible manner has increased rapidly in the last decade. These pressures are especially intense for resource-based companies. In the province of British Columbia, environmental policy, which is the basis of many forms of intervention by the provincial government, constitutes a significant constraint on the operations of forest companies. Diverse environmental group campaigns addressing issues such as preservation of temperate coastal rainforest, forest management practices, and air and water pollution by pulp and paper mills, have contributed to intensifying the environmental pressures on companies. Yet it is apparent that forest companies in B.C. which face similar competitive conditions and are regulated by the same environmental policies have responded differently. The research question addressed in this study was "Why do corporate responses to government and environmental group actions designed to protect the environment differ between corporations?" The research question was examined through the use of a comparative case study research strategy. Two B.C.-based companies which showed prima facie evidence of having divergent responses to environmental pressures were chosen for the study. Data was collected on government and environmental group actions on environmental issues for the period 1983 to 1997 to determine the substantive nature of the issues faced by corporations and to trace their evolution over the period covered by the study. Data on corporate responses between 1983 and 1997 was collected through interviews, newspaper reports, and corporate documents. The data was analyzed through a framework based on four theories of organization. Four models were specified in terms of their unit of analysis, organizing concepts, dominant inference patterns, and propositions: the rational choice model; the institutional model; the bureaucratic model; and the leadership model. The case studies demonstrated that while some government actions had distinct effects on the companies, and though one was the target of interest group actions more intensively and frequently than the other, the general operating and regulatory environment of the companies was more similar than it was distinct. Analyzing organizational characteristics with the use of the theoretical framework accounted for much of the difference in response. The rational model was not generally supported except in limited decision-making situations. The institutional model explained corporate stance in terms of the content and sources of institutional pressures. The bureaucratic model explained organizational output by illustrating how structural characteristics affected issues of goal setting and implementation of responses. The leadership model explained the extent to which changes in corporate strategy resulted from different types of leadership behaviour, subject to situational constraints. The four models were then integrated to derive some theoretical implications for academic research and some managerial implications for corporate managers. === Business, Sauder School of === Graduate
author Raizada, Rachana
author_facet Raizada, Rachana
author_sort Raizada, Rachana
title Corporate responses to government and environmental group actions designed to protect the environment
title_short Corporate responses to government and environmental group actions designed to protect the environment
title_full Corporate responses to government and environmental group actions designed to protect the environment
title_fullStr Corporate responses to government and environmental group actions designed to protect the environment
title_full_unstemmed Corporate responses to government and environmental group actions designed to protect the environment
title_sort corporate responses to government and environmental group actions designed to protect the environment
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/8658
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