2014
DOI: 10.1177/0095399713519094
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Sustainability, Intergenerational Social Equity, and the Socially Responsible Organization

Abstract: Drawing on perspectives from several academic traditions, we argue that sustainability is best understood as intergenerational social equity. When viewed thusly, it is possible to determine what socially responsible organizations look like in practice. After reviewing historic claims and evidence of sustainability, we turn to modern applications of institutionally based sustainability. We then describe sustainability in the framework of an intergenerational social equity model, claiming that the legacies of so… Show more

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Cited by 38 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…It contributes to cultivating new audiences: the free-trial opportunity helps bring potential audiences who are interested and can afford to pay but are not yet committed enough to paying for the experience (Bernstein 2011 ;Kotler and Scheff 1997 ;Parker 2012 ). Further, Moldavanova ( 2016 ) and Stazyk, Moldavanova, and Frederickson (2014) argue that such socially responsible initiatives help nonprofits keep institutional distinctiveness and long-term sustainability.…”
Section: Benefi Ts Of Arts and Cultural Programsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It contributes to cultivating new audiences: the free-trial opportunity helps bring potential audiences who are interested and can afford to pay but are not yet committed enough to paying for the experience (Bernstein 2011 ;Kotler and Scheff 1997 ;Parker 2012 ). Further, Moldavanova ( 2016 ) and Stazyk, Moldavanova, and Frederickson (2014) argue that such socially responsible initiatives help nonprofits keep institutional distinctiveness and long-term sustainability.…”
Section: Benefi Ts Of Arts and Cultural Programsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Their proximity to citizens, the volume of resources and services they manage and the high levels of debt and deficit caused by the public financial crisis in many industrialised countries [7,8] make this level of government of particular interest in studies of sustainability, which has economic, social and environmental repercussions for public entities [9][10][11]. The question of LG activity is also very significant in research into government transparency on sustainability, an issue that is of major interest to many elements of society [12,13].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hence, greater calls to restore New Public Leadership (Orazi, Turrini, & Valotti, ) and its focus on integrity and responsibility over accountability; the emergence of novel public management research streams that reemphasize collaborative governance (Ansell & Gash, ), conflict resolution between stakeholders (e.g., physicians, the central administration, and the local bureaucrats) and trust‐based policies (Van de Walle, ), and the rise of New Public Service and its set of norms and practices meant to restore democracy in public administration ( Denhardt & Denhardt, ). All of these stress procedural fairness (Jos, ), intergenerational equity, and socially‐responsible organizations (Stazyk, Moldavanova, & Frederickson, ) over earlier NPM‐driven policies that have emphasized a concentration of power.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%