Looking through the Chinese 'lens' of corporate environmental management

What was once the reign of a 'green' social organisational fringe, Corporate Environmental Management (CEM) has increasingly become a core business strategy. Research studies in this arena have been centred on industrialised nations, and until recently, there are still comparatively sparse...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rowe, Anna
Format: Journal Article
Published: Academy of International Business and Economics 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/27333
_version_ 1848752234612916224
author Rowe, Anna
author_facet Rowe, Anna
author_sort Rowe, Anna
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description What was once the reign of a 'green' social organisational fringe, Corporate Environmental Management (CEM) has increasingly become a core business strategy. Research studies in this arena have been centred on industrialised nations, and until recently, there are still comparatively sparse empirical studies on CEM for rapidly emerging nations like the People's Republic of China. As the most populous nation on earth with one fifth .of humanity (1.3 billions), China's astounding economic growth and resource consumption (Economist, 2005), provide 'telescoping' lessons in understanding the embracing of CEM in rapidly developing countries. Motivated by China's unique institutional structure and embryonic stage of environmentalism, the goal of this paper is to explore the normative assumptions underpinning the 'greening' phenomenon of corporate management in Shanghai and how business enterprises respond to such challenges. Specifically, this paper presents senior managers' perception of CEM in China. To illustrate the ontological difference of CEM concepts in Shanghai, two case-study enterprises are reported in this paper. Findings from this exploratory in-depth field study demonstrate the tacit nature of CEM lying beneath the regulative institutional structure in Shanghai. On reflection, the environmental paradigms and participants' perceptual realities provided great insights when thinking about the nature of CEM and the corresponding nature of the individuals who are expected to enact and/or comply with environmental regulations and rules.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T08:05:23Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-27333
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T08:05:23Z
publishDate 2006
publisher Academy of International Business and Economics
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-273332017-01-30T12:58:18Z Looking through the Chinese 'lens' of corporate environmental management Rowe, Anna corporate environmental management strategy sustaincentrism China technocentrism What was once the reign of a 'green' social organisational fringe, Corporate Environmental Management (CEM) has increasingly become a core business strategy. Research studies in this arena have been centred on industrialised nations, and until recently, there are still comparatively sparse empirical studies on CEM for rapidly emerging nations like the People's Republic of China. As the most populous nation on earth with one fifth .of humanity (1.3 billions), China's astounding economic growth and resource consumption (Economist, 2005), provide 'telescoping' lessons in understanding the embracing of CEM in rapidly developing countries. Motivated by China's unique institutional structure and embryonic stage of environmentalism, the goal of this paper is to explore the normative assumptions underpinning the 'greening' phenomenon of corporate management in Shanghai and how business enterprises respond to such challenges. Specifically, this paper presents senior managers' perception of CEM in China. To illustrate the ontological difference of CEM concepts in Shanghai, two case-study enterprises are reported in this paper. Findings from this exploratory in-depth field study demonstrate the tacit nature of CEM lying beneath the regulative institutional structure in Shanghai. On reflection, the environmental paradigms and participants' perceptual realities provided great insights when thinking about the nature of CEM and the corresponding nature of the individuals who are expected to enact and/or comply with environmental regulations and rules. 2006 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/27333 Academy of International Business and Economics restricted
spellingShingle corporate environmental management
strategy
sustaincentrism
China
technocentrism
Rowe, Anna
Looking through the Chinese 'lens' of corporate environmental management
title Looking through the Chinese 'lens' of corporate environmental management
title_full Looking through the Chinese 'lens' of corporate environmental management
title_fullStr Looking through the Chinese 'lens' of corporate environmental management
title_full_unstemmed Looking through the Chinese 'lens' of corporate environmental management
title_short Looking through the Chinese 'lens' of corporate environmental management
title_sort looking through the chinese 'lens' of corporate environmental management
topic corporate environmental management
strategy
sustaincentrism
China
technocentrism
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/27333