How do employee pro-environmental behaviors relate to the perceived success of workplace environmentally sustainable activities?
For decades, understanding the complexity of behaviors, motivations, and values has interested researchers across various disciplines. So much so that there are numerous terms, frameworks, theories, and studies devoted to understanding these complexities and how they interact and evolve into actions. However, little research has examined how employee behaviors translate into the work environment, particularly regarding perceived organizational success. This study advances research by quantitatively assessing how a greater number of individual employees’ pro-environmental behaviors are related to the perceived success of environmentally sustainable workplace activities. We have concluded that the more pro-environmental behaviors an employee embodies, the more positively they perceive the success of their local government's sustainable purchasing policy. Additionally, other factors matter, including organizational behaviors, like training, innovation, and reduction of red tape.
- Author (aut): Fox, Angela
- Thesis advisor (ths): Darnall, Nicole
- Committee member: Bretschneider, Stuart
- Committee member: Behravesh, Shirley-Ann
- Contributor (ctb): School of Sustainability