Nature of the publicationJournal article
Title of the publicationNo time like the present: How a present time perspective can foster sustainable development
Journal name/Book publisherAcademy of Management Journal
DOIdoi.org
Abstract

Sustainable development research has assumed that organizations must make intertemporal trade-offs between benefits now versus benefits later. However, under extreme resource constraints, organizations are unable to sacrifice resources now for benefits later without risking their survival. In these conditions, prior theory has suggested that organizations would be present focused, making sustainable development elusive. Through an ethnographic study, we investigated how tea producer organizations in eight communities in East Africa confronting severe resource constraints acted for sustainable development. We discovered that a “present” time perspective is richer than has been described previously. Prior time research has described the present as a “moment” in time, which allows managers to juxtapose the present against the future to make the intertemporal trade-offs for sustainable development. However, our tea producers did not see the future as a trade-off with the present. We discovered that they see duration in the present—what we call a “long present.” Because the present is long, they see connections among processes such as resource flows, which inspired incremental actions that continuously ease extreme resource shortages. We therefore offer an alternative to the trade-off thinking that currently dominates sustainable development discourse.

Author #1Anna Kim
Affiliation Author #1Desautels Faculty of Management, McGill University
Author #2Pratima (Tima) Bansal
Affiliation Author #2Ivey Business School, Western University
Author #3Helen Haugh
Affiliation Author #3Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge