Sustainable development is defined as development that meets the needs of the present without jeopardizing future generations' growth and prosperity, and involves the consideration of social, environmental, and economic resources (Brundtland, 1987). By extension, sustainability may be conceived of as ongoing processes of organizing across government, nonprofit, and for-profit entities to enable sustainable development. Conceptually, then, sustainability and sustainable development are concerned with the long-term management of human and nonhuman resources, rather than short-term priorities (e.g., shareholder returns), and provide an alternative organizing framework to mainstream capitalism. Whereas "soft" versions of sustainability envision an inclusion of long-term logics in mainstream capitalism, more "radical" versions argue that extant political economic systems of organizing are severely flawed and need to be revised entirely.The issue of sustainability is both old and new in organizational communication scholarship. On the one hand, the field has long centered the complex relations between organizations and their impacted societies as one of its key problematics. Over the years, organization-society relationships have been probed in different ways, such as through corporate social responsibility (CSR), employee/labor relations, worker participation, and work-life balance issues. Nevertheless, organizational communication research has rarely embraced the term "sustainability" itself, even when studying the management of scarce resources for organizing systems. Recently, however, as interdisciplinary attention has settled on the issue of sustainable development with some fervor -given the ongoing complexities of climate change, global pollution, and population shifts, among others -the role of communication (and organizational communication in particular) has reached center stage in the meaningful implementation of sustainability.
Sustainability in organizational communication researchFour broad areas of organizational communication research highlight sustainability: long-term organizational viability given the existence of multiple tensions, environmental CSR practices, corporate communication on broader environmental impacts, and resilience of complex adaptive systems. Research in these areas is published not just by communication scholars in the field's traditional journals (e.g., Management