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The Process of Establishing a Green Climate: Face-To-Face Interaction between Leaders and Employees in the Microsystem

Flagstad, Ingeborg Olsdatter Busterud; Johnsen, Svein Åge Kjøs; Rydstedt, Leif W
Peer reviewed, Journal article
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URI
https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3001406
Date
2021
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  • Artikkel - fagfellevurdert vitenskapelig / Articles - peer-reviewed [1662]
  • Publikasjoner fra Cristin - INN [1106]
Abstract
This study explores the processes of establishing a green organizational climate in small-scale companies. Previous studies have primarily focused on factors associated with pro-environmental behaviour in large organizations. The role of a green organizational climate—specifically, the interactional processes involved in the construction of a green climate—has largely been unexplored. Entrepreneurial small companies constitute an ideal arena in which to study the initial phase of greening processes. The present study examined the process of establishing a green organizational climate in seven small-scale Norwegian companies. This article presents a systems model that was developed to analyse how processes at different levels interact in the shaping of the green climate. The design was a longitudinal mixed-methods approach, consisting of focus-group interviews conducted in the field, a questionnaire and follow-up interviews with the leaders. Findings indicate that the construction of a green climate had a strong practise-based approach. The company founders were driven by environmental values; they sparked the initial green measures, influenced the employees—directly and indirectly—and also invited dialogue around and co-construction of the green climate. Frequent face-to-face interactions within the microsystem of the leaders/employees were decisive to the development of the green climate. The present study contributes to the understanding of the process of greening an organization: specifically, how green practice relates to the construction of a shared green climate. Contrary to previous research and theorizing, this study indicates that it is possible to “go green” without a superordinate green strategy.
Journal
The Journal of Values Based Leadership

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