Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://archive.cmb.ac.lk:8080/xmlui/handle/70130/6066
Title: Does Buddhism Enable a Different Sustainability Ethic at Work?
Authors: Abeydeera, S.
Kearins, K.
Tregidga, H.
Keywords: Buddhism
Systems thinking
Sustainability
Managerial sense-making
Sri Lanka
Issue Date: 2016
Publisher: Greenleaf Publishing
Citation: Abeydeera, S., Kearins, K., & Tregidga, H. (2016). Does Buddhism Enable a Different Sustainability Ethic at Work? The Journal of Corporate Citizenship(62), 109-130.
Abstract: This paper examines how sustainability managers in a Buddhist country context make sense of sustainability and the extent to which they see themselves as able to enact their private moral positions at work. Analysis of interviews with 25 managers involved with sustainability initiatives in Sri Lankan organizations reveals differences between private moral positions, conventional and enacted morality. Buddhist values that typically shape managers’ private moral positions on sustainability—interconnectedness, moderation, empathy and reciprocity—tend not to be reflected in the organizations in which they work. The conventional emphasis in organizations is typically a measure-and-manage approach to sustainability, with only a few organizations reported as displaying more extensive concern for the environment and for community needs and employee wellbeing. Managers’ enacted morality is found to be based on the prioritization of economic concerns in the organizations in which they work, and the perceived importance of a secular view. Buddhism has potential to inform sustainability, but its actual enactment is problematic as individuals’ moral positions do not translate easily to collective enactment, even in a predominantly Buddhist country context.
URI: http://archive.cmb.ac.lk:8080/xmlui/handle/70130/6066
Appears in Collections:Department of Management & Organization Studies

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