2009
DOI: 10.1146/annurev.environ.032908.091450
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Voluntary Environmental Programs: Assessing Their Effectiveness

Abstract: Voluntary environmental programs (VEPs) seek to improve the environment by encouraging, rather than mandating, businesses and other organizations to adopt environmentally protective measures. Since the 1990s, VEPs established by industry, government, and nongovernmental organizations have proliferated around the globe, raising the question of how effective these programs are in securing environmental protection, both on their own and in comparison to traditional mandatory regulations. This article reviews the … Show more

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Cited by 142 publications
(84 citation statements)
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“…Focusing on environmental impacts, specifically, a body of scholarship identifies various factors involved in corporate governance of environmental problems. This work normally focuses on initiatives within firms or across firms of like-kind (e.g., Borck & Coglianese, 2009;Gouldson & Sullivan, 2014;Howard-Grenville, Nash, & Coglianese, 2008;Prakash & Potoski, 2006). This literature shows that an organization's willingness to engage in 'beyond compliance' environmental programmes is shaped by both external conditions (regulation, economic and social) and a range of internal, interacting factors, including management style, organizational culture and organizational structure.…”
Section: Corporate Environmental Governance (Ceg) and Voluntary Envirmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Focusing on environmental impacts, specifically, a body of scholarship identifies various factors involved in corporate governance of environmental problems. This work normally focuses on initiatives within firms or across firms of like-kind (e.g., Borck & Coglianese, 2009;Gouldson & Sullivan, 2014;Howard-Grenville, Nash, & Coglianese, 2008;Prakash & Potoski, 2006). This literature shows that an organization's willingness to engage in 'beyond compliance' environmental programmes is shaped by both external conditions (regulation, economic and social) and a range of internal, interacting factors, including management style, organizational culture and organizational structure.…”
Section: Corporate Environmental Governance (Ceg) and Voluntary Envirmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This literature shows that an organization's willingness to engage in 'beyond compliance' environmental programmes is shaped by both external conditions (regulation, economic and social) and a range of internal, interacting factors, including management style, organizational culture and organizational structure. In their review of the VEP literature, Borck and Coglianese (2009) note three types of businesses are likely to participate in VEPs: (1) larger businesses, as they have greater resources to participate and may benefit most from recognition, (2) businesses with internal cultures supportive of environmentally friendly behaviour, and (3) businesses that face (or are likely to face) stricter government regulations.…”
Section: Corporate Environmental Governance (Ceg) and Voluntary Envirmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Many empirical studies support an instrumental perspective by showing that pro-social behavior may favor business prospects in many respects (e.g., Borck and Coglianese, 2009;Christmann, 2000;Stites and Michael, 2011). However, the "virtuous circle" (Porter and Kramer, 2002) which assumes economic profit and the social good as mutually reinforcing, does not grasp the whole story.…”
Section: Review Of the Prevalent Approaches To Csrmentioning
confidence: 99%
“… PVPs that provide signaling features to the market (e.g., suppliers and customers) address information imbalances, or asymmetries, associated with complex products and processes; specifically, incomplete information can result in decisions that create negative environmental impacts, or externalities (see Darnall and Carmin 2005;Borck and Coglianese 2009).…”
Section: Voluntary Programs and Their Economic Justificationmentioning
confidence: 99%