4.6 Article

Unpacking B Corps' Impact on Sustainable Development: An Analysis from Structuration Theory

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 13, Issue 23, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su132313408

Keywords

Sustainable Development (SD); Triple Bottom Line (TBL); Structuration Theory (ST); hybrid organisations; B Corps; business models; sustainability transitions

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The study examines the impact of Certified B Corporations (B Corps) on sustainable development in Colombia, focusing on four categories including considering future generations, enhancing human development, encouraging new mindsets, behaviors, and lifestyles, and promoting socio-political engagement. The findings suggest that B Corps develop communicative and narrative discourses and symbolic schemas to exert power and legitimation in sustainability transitions and business models research.
With Our Common Future and the United Nation's global call to implement the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in 2030, public policies increasingly emphasise the need for various actors to contribute to a global transformation and a more sustainable future. Despite growing research on hybrid organisations and their contributions to sustainable development, their impact on accelerating this transition might be faulty. Looking at a type of hybrid organisation, Certified B Corporations (B Corps), this article draws on a multiple case study of nine B Corps in a developing country in Latin America, Colombia. The study builds on the Structuration Theory to examine to what extent and how B Corps impact sustainable development. The article empirically shows that B Corps focus on four categories of sustainable development: considering future generations; enhancing human development; encouraging new mindsets, behaviours, and lifestyles; and promoting socio-political engagement. The findings suggest that B Corps develop communicative and narrative discourses and symbolic schemas as means of signification and follow norms and moral rules to exert legitimation and utilise authoritative resources to exercise power. The article contributes to research on hybrid organisations, sustainability transitions, and business models.

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