Marketing and sustainability: Business as usual or changing worldviews?

Type of content
Journal Article
Thesis discipline
Degree name
Publisher
MDPI AG
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Language
en
Date
2019
Authors
Kemper, Joya A.
Hall, Colin Michael
Ballantine, Paul
Abstract

Marketing, and the business schools within which most marketing academics and researchers work, have a fraught relationship with sustainability. Marketing is typically regarded as encouraging overconsumption and contributing to global change yet, simultaneously, it is also promoted as a means to enable sustainable consumption. Based on a critical review of the literature, the paper responds to the need to better understand the underpinnings of marketing worldviews with respect to sustainability. The paper discusses the concept of worldviews and their transformation, sustainability's articulation in marketing and business schools, and the implications of the market logic dominance in faculty mind-sets. This is timely given that business schools are increasingly positioning themselves as a positive contributor to sustainability. Institutional barriers, specifically within universities, business schools, and the marketing discipline, are identified as affecting the ability to effect 'bottom-up' change. It is concluded that if institutions, including disciplines and business schools, remain wedded to assumptions regarding the compatibility between the environment and economic growth and acceptance of market forces then the development of alternative perspectives on sustainability remains highly problematic.

Description
Citation
Kemper JA, Hall CM, Ballantine PW (2019). Marketing and sustainability: Business as usual or changing worldviews?. Sustainability (Switzerland). 11(3). 780-780.
Keywords
green marketing, sustainable marketing, sustainable development, sustainability, institutional change, paradigm change, worldview
Ngā upoko tukutuku/Māori subject headings
ANZSRC fields of research
12 Built Environment and Design
Fields of Research::35 - Commerce, management, tourism and services::3506 - Marketing
Fields of Research::44 - Human society::4410 - Sociology
Fields of Research::47 - Language, communication and culture::4702 - Cultural studies::470209 - Environment and culture
Rights
All rights reserved unless otherwise stated