2006
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbusres.2005.08.006
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Economic incentives and small firms: Does it pay to be green?

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Cited by 197 publications
(142 citation statements)
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References 57 publications
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“…The shortage of such skills is responsible for the high rate of failure of newly established companies. According to Clemens [18] and Wagner [91], it is strategically important to have access to skills-based programmes of training if newly established companies are to bridge the skills gap in the SMME sector. Business programmes that are offered by South African universities are not relevant to the survival needs of small and medium-sized enterprises.…”
Section: Discussion Of Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The shortage of such skills is responsible for the high rate of failure of newly established companies. According to Clemens [18] and Wagner [91], it is strategically important to have access to skills-based programmes of training if newly established companies are to bridge the skills gap in the SMME sector. Business programmes that are offered by South African universities are not relevant to the survival needs of small and medium-sized enterprises.…”
Section: Discussion Of Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the majority of Sub-Saharan African countries, the most notable obstacles to sustained growth and development are lack of access to finance [18], the acute shortage of entrepreneurial skills [19], poor infrastructural development [20] and heavy bureaucracy and legislative obstacles [21]. The study conducted by Chapman [22] has found that superior and well-proven entrepreneurial skills are essential for establishing viable small, micro and medium enterprises globally, and that business operators who lack entrepreneurial skills must aspire to improve their capacity of business leadership constantly.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Research in the field of Green HRM is inter-disciplinary, drawing from organizational themes within strategic management (Aragón-Correa & Rubio-López, 2007;Boiral, 2009, Jabbour et al, 2010Schroeder, 2012), organizational performance and performance management (Clemens, 2006;Jabbour et al, 2015;Länsiluoto & Jarvenpää, 2010;Marcus & Fremeth, 2009;Ambec & Lanoie, 2008), organizational culture, employee engagement, staff development and training (Govindarajulu & Daily, 2004;Jabbour 2013b;Rothenberg, 2003;Vaccaro & Echeverri, 2010). The following literature review focuses on the two prominent areas in the Green HRM debate as identified earlier in this study: the positioning and alignment of the environment and HR function including the integration with organizational performance and Green employee engagement.…”
Section: Green Hrmmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Nevertheless, the use of subjective perceptions of managers and directors to measure firm performance is widely accepted in the strategy and ONE literatures (e.g. Aragón-Correa et al, 2008;Branzei et al, 2004;Clemens, 2006;Chan, 2005;Judge and Douglas, 1998;Sharma and Vredenburg, 1998).…”
Section: Measure For Environmental Performancementioning
confidence: 99%