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Chapter 2 Integral Response-Abilities for Sustainable Organizing and Managing

Business and Sustainability: Concepts, Strategies and Changes

ISBN: 978-1-78052-438-2, eISBN: 978-1-78052-439-9

Publication date: 6 December 2011

Abstract

Facing the widely spread malaise in and through irresponsible practices of and by modern organizations, phenomenology can provide an approach that is helpful for assessing this situation as well as getting a renewed perception concerning work and life (Fay & Riot, 2007). In particular, it can contribute to a renewal of understanding and enacting responsibility in the lifeworld of business. Practically, it may also provide reflexive practitioners with clues that can trigger new and more responsible practices. The following phenomenological perspective on responsiveness is a kind of application of phenomenology (Harmon, 1990) for reevaluating the constitution of responsibility as capacity to respond adequately in and of organizations and its members. Part of the organizational realities for its members is that it is challenging them to act, speak, and express, that is, they are provoked to give answers. A corresponding responsiveness as an answering behavior can be defined specifically as one, in which there is openness for the points of view of both (or various) parties involved, and by which the setting of pattern and standards coevolve.3

Citation

Küpers, W.M. (2011), "Chapter 2 Integral Response-Abilities for Sustainable Organizing and Managing", Eweje, G. and Perry, M. (Ed.) Business and Sustainability: Concepts, Strategies and Changes (Critical Studies on Corporate Responsibility, Governance and Sustainability, Vol. 3), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 25-58. https://doi.org/10.1108/S2043-9059(2011)0000003010

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2011, Emerald Group Publishing Limited