THE MULTILEVEL PATH TO CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION

被引:0
作者
de Brito, Renata Peregrino [1 ]
机构
[1] Pontificia Univ Catol, Escola Negocios, Rio De Janeiro, RJ, Brazil
来源
RAE-REVISTA DE ADMINISTRACAO DE EMPRESAS | 2022年 / 62卷 / 06期
关键词
adaptation; climate change; risk perception; resources and capabilities; multilevel; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; GRAND CHALLENGES; CHANGE RISK; STRATEGIES; VULNERABILITY; CAPABILITIES; PERCEPTIONS; ENTERPRISES; COGNITION; BARRIERS;
D O I
10.1590/S0034-759020220609
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Climate change is a much neglected but urgent matter for society. Frequent and extreme weather events, fires, rising sea levels, and other such events are just some of the expected effects for which organizations must prepare and adapt. This article presents a systematic literature review on climate change adaptation and analyzes the factors that influence organizations' strategic decision-making. The findings lead to a model elaborated to explain the role of such factors, considering their level of influence - individual, organizational, and institutional. This study contributes to the literature by proposing a model of climate change adaptation and explains the relationship between the internal and external factors in a multilevel context. The model identifies risk perception as one of the main contingent factors in adapting to climate change. Other contingent factors are the organizational resources and capabilities, stakeholders, and partnerships. Finally, the study demonstrates that public policies, values, individual experience, and cognitive capacity are important antecedents in the adaptation process.
引用
收藏
页数:20
相关论文
共 70 条
[41]   Assessing adaptive capacity of water management organizations. The case study of the municipality of Tomave (Bolivia) [J].
Minucci, Guido .
JOURNAL OF RISK RESEARCH, 2016, 19 (07) :847-872
[42]   Drivers of flood and climate change risk perceptions and intention to adapt: an explorative survey in coastal and delta Vietnam [J].
Ngo, Chinh C. ;
Poortvliet, P. Marijn ;
Feindt, Peter H. .
JOURNAL OF RISK RESEARCH, 2020, 23 (04) :424-446
[43]   Social and organizational learning in the adaptation to the process of climate change: The case of a Brazilian thermoplastic resins and petrochemical company [J].
Nicolletti, Mariana ;
Lutti, Natalia ;
Souza, Renato ;
Pagotto, Livia .
JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION, 2019, 226 :748-758
[44]   CLIMATE-PROOFING MANAGEMENT RESEARCH [J].
Nyberg, Daniel ;
Wright, Christopher .
ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT PERSPECTIVES, 2022, 36 (02) :713-728
[45]   Sport versus climate: Introducing the climate vulnerability of sport organizations framework [J].
Orr, Madeleine ;
Inoue, Yuhei .
SPORT MANAGEMENT REVIEW, 2019, 22 (04) :452-463
[46]   Narrative research in climate change adaptation-Exploring a complementary paradigm for research and governance [J].
Paschen, Jana-Axinja ;
Ison, Ray .
RESEARCH POLICY, 2014, 43 (06) :1083-1092
[47]   Managing Physical Impacts of Climate Change: An Attentional Perspective on Corporate Adaptation [J].
Pinkse, Jonatan ;
Gasbarro, Federica .
BUSINESS & SOCIETY, 2019, 58 (02) :333-368
[48]   Framework for stakeholder collaboration in harnessing corporate social responsibility implementation in tourist destination to build community adaptive capacity to climate change [J].
Rahmawati, Putu Indah ;
Jiang, Min ;
DeLacy, Terry .
CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY AND ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2019, 26 (06) :1261-1271
[49]   Business adaptation to climate change: American ski resorts and warmer temperatures [J].
Rivera, Jorge ;
Clement, Viviane .
BUSINESS STRATEGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT, 2019, 28 (07) :1285-1301
[50]   Using ski industry response to climatic variability to assess climate change risk: An analogue study in Eastern Canada [J].
Rutty, Michelle ;
Scott, Daniel ;
Johnson, Peter ;
Pons, Marc ;
Steiger, Robert ;
Vilella, Marc .
TOURISM MANAGEMENT, 2017, 58 :196-204