Ralf Barkemeyer
KEDGE Business School
81 Papers
182 Citations
Ralf Barkemeyer is an academic researcher from KEDGE Business School. The author has contributed to research in topics: Corporate social responsibility & Sustainability. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 70 publications. Previous affiliations of Ralf Barkemeyer include Queen's University & Queen's University Belfast.
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Papers
What Happened to the ‘Development’ in Sustainable Development? Business Guidelines Two Decades After Brundtland
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the extent to which the original principles of sustainable development are still embedded within key business guidelines, namely the UN Global Compact, the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises, the ICC Business Charter for Sustainable Development, the CAUX Principles, the Global Sullivan Principles and the CERES Principles.
Can social media be a tool for reducing consumers’ food waste? A behaviour change experiment by a UK retailer
TL;DR: The authors reported on a landmark study to field test the influence of a large retailer to change the behavior of its millions of customers by implementing three interventions with messages to encourage reductions in food waste.
184
Trends and patterns in sustainable entrepreneurship research: A bibliometric review and research agenda
TL;DR: In this article, the authors combine two bibliometric approaches (i.e., co-citation analysis of references and bibliographic coupling of documents) with manual coding of documents to take stock of progress within the field, mapping out focal points as well as blind spots in the sustainable entrepreneurship research agenda.
183
Sufficiency or efficiency to achieve lower resource consumption and emissions? The role of the rebound effect
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that the range of possible secondary effects of efficiency and sufficiency strategies goes beyond the rebound effect, and they develop an "Eco-efficiency-sufficiency matrix" to logically order eco-efficiency and SUfficiency measures to attain lower resource consumption and emissions.
176
On the effectiveness of private transnational governance regimes - evaluating corporate sustainability reporting according to the Global Reporting Initiative
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the effectiveness of one transnational governance regime, corporate sustainability reporting according to the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI), and find that the GRI has been successful in terms of output effectiveness by promoting the dissemination of sustainability reporting, in particular among Asian and South American companies.
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