Antecedents of green supplier championing and greenwashing: An empirical study on leadership and ethical incentives

Buying firms are increasingly confronted with compliance scandals in their upstream supply chain, for which they are held accountable by their stakeholders. Purely symbolic practices, typically referred to as greenwashing, as well as substantive practices, such as green supplier championing, are thu...

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Main Authors: Blome, Constantin, Foerstl, Kai, Schleper, Martin C.
Format: Article
Published: Elsevier 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/41602/
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author Blome, Constantin
Foerstl, Kai
Schleper, Martin C.
author_facet Blome, Constantin
Foerstl, Kai
Schleper, Martin C.
author_sort Blome, Constantin
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Buying firms are increasingly confronted with compliance scandals in their upstream supply chain, for which they are held accountable by their stakeholders. Purely symbolic practices, typically referred to as greenwashing, as well as substantive practices, such as green supplier championing, are thus receiving widespread attention in business practices and academia alike. In this study, we reveal the impact of two opposing leadership dimensions following the concepts of ethical and transactional leadership as antecedents for green supplier championing and greenwashing. We particularly address whether these antecedents have a complementary or a counterproductive effect on green supplier championing and greenwashing. Furthermore, we investigate the complementary impact of incentives and the two leadership styles on achieving sustainability behavior. The resulting model is tested using a path analysis based on a data set of 118 firms located in Germany. We find support for the positive impact of ethical leadership on green supplier championing but also a non-significant negative impact on greenwashing. Greenwashing is significantly impacted by leadership styles reflecting obedience to authority, and further moderated by ethical incentives. Interestingly, ethical incentives do not moderate the impact of ethical leadership on green supplier championing. Finally, we discuss implications for theory and business practice.
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spelling nottingham-416022020-05-04T18:46:13Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/41602/ Antecedents of green supplier championing and greenwashing: An empirical study on leadership and ethical incentives Blome, Constantin Foerstl, Kai Schleper, Martin C. Buying firms are increasingly confronted with compliance scandals in their upstream supply chain, for which they are held accountable by their stakeholders. Purely symbolic practices, typically referred to as greenwashing, as well as substantive practices, such as green supplier championing, are thus receiving widespread attention in business practices and academia alike. In this study, we reveal the impact of two opposing leadership dimensions following the concepts of ethical and transactional leadership as antecedents for green supplier championing and greenwashing. We particularly address whether these antecedents have a complementary or a counterproductive effect on green supplier championing and greenwashing. Furthermore, we investigate the complementary impact of incentives and the two leadership styles on achieving sustainability behavior. The resulting model is tested using a path analysis based on a data set of 118 firms located in Germany. We find support for the positive impact of ethical leadership on green supplier championing but also a non-significant negative impact on greenwashing. Greenwashing is significantly impacted by leadership styles reflecting obedience to authority, and further moderated by ethical incentives. Interestingly, ethical incentives do not moderate the impact of ethical leadership on green supplier championing. Finally, we discuss implications for theory and business practice. Elsevier 2017-05-20 Article PeerReviewed Blome, Constantin, Foerstl, Kai and Schleper, Martin C. (2017) Antecedents of green supplier championing and greenwashing: An empirical study on leadership and ethical incentives. Journal of Cleaner Production, 152 . pp. 339-350. ISSN 1879-1786 Ethical leadership Greenwashing; Green championing; Path analysis; Substantive actions; Supplier management; Sustainability; Symbolic actions; Transactional leadership http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0959652617304870 doi:10.1016/j.jclepro.2017.03.052 doi:10.1016/j.jclepro.2017.03.052
spellingShingle Ethical leadership
Greenwashing; Green championing; Path analysis; Substantive actions; Supplier management; Sustainability; Symbolic actions; Transactional leadership
Blome, Constantin
Foerstl, Kai
Schleper, Martin C.
Antecedents of green supplier championing and greenwashing: An empirical study on leadership and ethical incentives
title Antecedents of green supplier championing and greenwashing: An empirical study on leadership and ethical incentives
title_full Antecedents of green supplier championing and greenwashing: An empirical study on leadership and ethical incentives
title_fullStr Antecedents of green supplier championing and greenwashing: An empirical study on leadership and ethical incentives
title_full_unstemmed Antecedents of green supplier championing and greenwashing: An empirical study on leadership and ethical incentives
title_short Antecedents of green supplier championing and greenwashing: An empirical study on leadership and ethical incentives
title_sort antecedents of green supplier championing and greenwashing: an empirical study on leadership and ethical incentives
topic Ethical leadership
Greenwashing; Green championing; Path analysis; Substantive actions; Supplier management; Sustainability; Symbolic actions; Transactional leadership
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/41602/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/41602/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/41602/