The genesis of this study was several projects undertaken by the author, commencing in 2006, that identified IT as a potential source of solutions to address the challenges of environmental sustainability but that also found the issue had not engaged academic researchers in technology disciplines at a level likely to realize that potential. Work that had been undertaken, as a whole, focused on small parts of a large and complex problem from the narrow perspective of a single discipline.Within its overall aim, this study seeks to synthesize the environmental sustainability literature to increase its accessibility by a diversity of policy, practitioner, researcher, and social activist audiences. Environmental sustainability is a complex and multifaceted issue but the literature to date is overwhelmingly discipline-oriented. Hence, the proposal that a comprehensive, transdisciplinary framework for business transformation based on synthesis of the literature could facilitate the level of transformation required in business, politics, and society. The framework for business transformation is transdisciplinary, rather than multidisciplinary (more than one) or interdisciplinary (several integrated), in that the objective is to present a conceptual model accessible to and applicable by stakeholders across and beyond academic disciplines. The study subsequently sought to show how this framework could be applied to assist fundamental change in prevailing practices that restrain technology-generated environmental degradation and to promote opportunities for technology-enabled solutions.Recognizing the particular challenges inherent in a transdisciplinary literature review of a highly complex subject with nearly two million potential publications, the conceptual framework was developed in three phases. In phase one, a scoping review, each of the authoritative reports purposively selected for their relevance to the aims of the study (see listings of phase 1 sources in Tables 3 through 8) was analyzed to determine the specific problems to be the focus of this work and coded to identify the primary and secondary focal themes. The themes identified in each report were then grouped to form categories and subcategories. In phase two, the categorization from phase one was compared with academic research papers selected for relevance to the aims of the study from a selection of leading business and associated journals and from highly cited articles. The purpose was to ensure the problems and categories from phase one had relevance to business and had the potential for research contributions, as demonstrated by highly regarded research publications.In phase two, the papers were selected by searching leading business journals (e.g., the Academy of Management journals, California Management Review, Harvard Business Review, Management Science, Sloan Management Review, and Strategic Management Journal) for relevant papers, seeking references within these papers, and searching for highly cited, relevant business-oriented papers through Sc...