VOLUME ONE: CONCEPTS
Part One: The Meaning of Sustainability
Sustainability: An Economist′s Perspective - Robert Solow
Toward Some Operational Principles of Sustainable Development -
Herman Daly
A General Framework for Analyzing Sustainability of
Social-Ecological Systems - Elinor Ostrom
Intergenerational Equity and the Investment of Rents from
Exhaustible Resources - John Hartwick
Capital Theory and the Measurement of Sustainable Development: An
Indicator of “Weak” Sustainability - David Pearce and Giles
Atkinson
Innovative Responses to Materials Shortages - Nathan Rosenberg
Social Capital and the Collective Management of Resources - Jules
Pretty
Social Sustainability: A Catchword between Political Pragmatism and
Social Theory - Beate Littig and Erich Grießler
The Economics of Resources and the Resources of Economics - Robert
Solow
Part Two: Sustainability and Governance
The Struggle to Govern the Commons - Thomas Dietz, Elinor Ostrom
and Paul C. Stern
Informational Regulation of Environmental Risks - Paul Kleindorfer
and Eric Orts
Institutional Evolution and Change: Environmentalism and the US
Chemical Industry - Andrew Hoffman
Part Three: Concepts of Corporate Sustainability
A Natural-Resource-based View of the Firm - Stuart Hart
Sustainability and the Firm - Forest Reinhardt
Impure Altruism and Donations to Public Goods: A Theory of
Warm-Glow Giving - James Andreoni
Incentives and Prosocial Behavior. - Roland Benabou and Jean
Tirole
A Modigliani–Miller Theory of Altruistic Corporate Social
Responsibility - Joshua Zivin and Arthur Small
VOLUME TWO: DRIVERS
Part One: Private Politics
Strategic Activism and Nonmarket Strategy - David Baron and Daniel
Diermeier
Trouble in Store: Probes, Protests, and Store Openings by Wal-Mart,
1998–2007 - Paul Ingram, Lori Qingyuan Yue and Hayagreeva Rao
Private Environmental Activism and the Selection and Response of
Firm Targets - Michael Lenox and Charles Eesley
Part Two: Regulatory Pressure
Compliance and Enforcement: Air Pollution Regulation in the U.S.
Steel Industry - Wayne Gray and Mary Deily
Enforcement and Over-Compliance - Jay Shimshack and Michael
Ward
The Impacts of the “Right to Know”: Information Disclosure and the
Violation of Drinking Water Standards - Lori Bennear and
Sheila Olmstead
Self-Regulation and Social Welfare: The Political Economy of
Corporate Environmentalism - John Maxwell, Thomas Lyon and Steven
Hackett
Organizational Responses to Environmental Demands: Opening the
Black Box - Magali Delmas and Michael Toffel
Part Three: Consumer Demand
Why We Boycott: Consumer Motivations for Boycott Participation -
Jill Gabrielle Klein, N. Craig Smith and Andrew John
Green Markets and Private Provision of Public Goods - Mathew
Kotchen
Does Doing Good Always Lead to Doing Better? Consumer Reactions to
Corporate Social Responsibility - Sankar Sen and C.B.
Bhattacharya
Private Provision of Environmental Public Goods: Household
Participation in Green-Electricity Programs - Matthew Kotchen and
Michael Moore
Eco-Labeling Strategies and Price Premium: The Wine Industry Puzzle
- Magali Delmas and Laura Grant
Part Four: Employees and Management
Why Companies Go Green: A Model of Ecological Responsiveness -
Pratima Bansal and Kendall Roth
A Positive Theory of Moral Management, Social Pressure, and
Corporate Social Performance - David Baron
Attracting Responsible Employees: Green Production as Labor Market
Screening - Kjell Arne Brekke and Karine Nyborg
Managerial Interpretations and Organizational Context as Predictors
of Corporate Choice of Environmental Strategy - Sanjay Sharma
VOLUME THREE: STRATEGY
Part One: Environmental Management and Cost Leadership
Effects of “Best Practices” of Environmental Management on Cost
Advantage: The Role of Complementary Assets - Petra Christmann
Exploring the Locus of Profitable Pollution Reduction - Andrew King
and Michael Lenox
Green Clubs and Voluntary Governance: ISO 14001 and Firms’
Regulatory Compliance - Matthew Potoski and Aseem Prakash
Part Two: Green Markets, Product Differentiation and
Ecolabeling
Selling to Socially Responsible Consumers: Competition and the
Private Provision of Public Goods - Mark Bagnoli and Susan
Watts
Label Confusion: The Groucho Effect of Uncertain Standards - Rick
Harbaugh, John Maxwell and Beatrice Rousillon
Can Eco-Labels Tune a Market? Evidence from Dolphin-Safe Labeling -
Mario Teisl, Brian Roe and Robert Hicks
Greenwash: Corporate Environmental Disclosure under Threat of Audit
- Thomas Lyon and John Maxwell
Tilting at Windmills? The Environmental Movement and the Emergence
of the U.S. Wind Energy Sector - Wesley Sine and Brandon Lee
Part Three: Activists, Private Politics and Self-Regulation
The Industrial Organization of Private Politics - David Baron
Part Four: Industry self-Regulation
Industry Self-Regulation without Sanctions: The Chemical Industry′s
Responsible Care Program - Andrew King and Michael Lenox
Self-Regulation, Taxation, and Public Voluntary Environmental
Agreements - Thomas Lyon and John Maxwell
Testing the Effects of Self-Regulation on Industrial Accidents -
Steven Finger and Shanti Gamper-Rabindran
Part Five: Political Strategy
Toward a More General Theory of Regulation - Sam Peltzman
Quality Leadership When Regulatory Standards are Forthcoming -
Stefan Lutz, Thomas Lyon and John Maxwell
Corporate Environmentalism and Environmental Statutory Permitting -
Christopher Decker
VOLUME FOUR: CONSEQUENCES
Part One: Corporate Financial Performance
The Effect of Socially Activist Investment Policies on the
Financial Markets: Evidence from the South African Boycott - Teoh
Siew Hong, Ivo Welch and Paul Wazzan
Do Corporate Global Environmental Standards Create or Destroy
Market Value? - Glen Dowell, Stuart Hart and Bernard Yeung
Part Two: Investors
Do Stock Markets Penalize Environment-Unfriendly Behaviour?
Evidence From India - Shreekant Gupta and Bishwanath Goldar
Misery Loves Companies: Rethinking Social Initiative by Business -
Joshua Margolis and James Walsh
Talking Trash: Legitimacy, Impression Management, and Unsystemmatic
Risk in the Context of the Natural Environment - Pratima Bansal and
Iain Clelland
Social Movements as Extra-Institutional Entrepreneurs: The Effect
of Protests on Stock Price Returns - Brayden King and Sarah
Soule
Doing Well by Doing Good? Green Office Buildings - Piet Eichholtz,
Nils Kok and John Quigley
Environmental Disclosure: Evidence from Newsweek’s Green Companies
Rankings - Thomas Lyon and Jay himshack
Part Three: Corporate Social and Environmental Performance
Informal Regulation of Industrial Pollution in Developing
Countries: Evidence from Indonesia - Sheoli Pargal and David
Wheeler
Information as Regulation: The Effect of Community Right to Know
Laws on Toxic Emissions - Shameek Konar and Mark Cohen
How Firms Respond to Mandatory Information Disclosure - Anil R.
Doshi, Glen W.S. Dowell and Michael W. Toffel
Public Disclosure of Industrial Pollution: The PROPER Approach for
Indonesia? - Jorge H. García, Thomas Sterner and Shakeb Afsah
Voluntary Compliance, Pollution Levels, and Infant Mortality in
Mexico - Andrew Foster, Emilio Gutierrez and Naresh Kumar
Multinationals and Anti-Sweatshop Activism - Ann Harrison and Jason
Scorse
Daniel Diermeier serves as the thirteenth Provost of the University of Chicago. As Provost, Diermeier has responsibility for academic and research programs across the University and oversees the University’s budget. Prior to his appointment as Provost, Diermeier was Dean of the Harris School of Public Policy from 2014-2016. He is the David Lee Shillinglaw Distinguished Service Professor at the Harris School and the College and a member of the Board of the University of Chicago Medical Center, the Board of Governors for Argonne National Laboratory, and the Board of Trustees of NORC.
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