| Literature DB >> 36032314 |
Walter Leal Filho1,2, Amanda Lange Salvia3, Claudio Ruy Portela Vasconcelos4,5, Rosley Anholon6, Izabela Simon Rampasso7, João Henrique Paulino Pires Eustachio8, Olena Liakh9, Maria Alzira Pimenta Dinis10, Raquel Cementina Olpoc11, Joseph Bandanaa12, Yusuf A Aina13,14, Regine Lolekola Lukina15, Ayyoob Sharifi16.
Abstract
Social sustainability is a work field characterised by an emphasis on social aspects, e.g. equity, ethics, health, gender balance, or empowerment, within a broader sustainability context. Although the concept seems to be reasonably well established and deemed worthy of pursuing, some obstacles prevent its wide dissemination. Through a bibliometric analysis focusing on the literature on social sustainability at institutions, with a focus on companies, this paper aims to investigate and describe some of the barriers associated with social sustainability implementation. Apart from identifying that sustainability reporting, environmental disclosure and financial performance play a central role in successfully achieving social sustainability, in the context of which gender-related issues seem more tangential, the results indicated some solutions commonly reported for overcoming barriers and obstacles to a company's social sustainability implementation within different sectors. These solutions have to do, among many other factors addressed in this study, with strengthening communication transparency and trust, contributing to awareness, using technology to document and promote social sustainability. Thus, empowering organizations and citizens, recognized as essential factors to social development, and addressing the challenges in a multi-dimensional way.Entities:
Keywords: Challenges; Difficulties; Social dimension; Sustainable development
Year: 2022 PMID: 36032314 PMCID: PMC9391629 DOI: 10.1007/s11625-022-01204-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sustain Sci ISSN: 1862-4057 Impact factor: 7.196
Fig. 1Components and dynamics of corporate social sustainability and innovation.
Source: Adapted from Ajmal et al. (2018) and Popa and Salanță (2015)
Fig. 3The term co-occurrence analysis (including all studies related to social sustainability at companies)
Solutions to barriers and obstacles to social sustainability within companies
| Category | Driver | Addressed area and references |
|---|---|---|
| External social awareness | Establishment and application of social regulations | Supply chain (Nair and Thankamony Corporate social responsibility in the industry (Merli et al. Construction industry (Karji et al. Manufacturing industry (Awan et al. |
| Transparency and trust | Supply chain (Beltagui et al. | |
| Technology | Internet of things (IoT) | Supply chain (Khan et al. |
| 3D printing | Social manufacturing (Hamalainen et al. Supply chain (Beltagui et al. | |
| Knowledge sharing | Disaster risk (Imperiale and Vanclay Construction industry (Karji et al. | |
| Infrastructure | Establishment of coordination between stakeholders | Healthcare (Khan et al. Corporate Social Responsibility in business strategy (Kealy |
| Organisational culture | Investment in training and experience | Healthcare (Khan et al. Corporate Social Responsibility in business strategy (Kealy |
| Management support, empowerment, and commitment | Healthcare (Hussain et al. Construction industry (Karji et al. Corporate social responsibility in business strategy (Kealy Manufacturing industry (Awan et al. | |
| Social–ecological governance | Disaster risk (Imperiale and Vanclay | |
| Stable political climate | Supply chain (Chen et al. Construction industry (Karji et al. | |
| Access to healthcare | Healthcare (Macassa and Tomaselli | |
| Uncertainty | Just-in-time systems | Supply chain (Rupasinghe and Wijethilake |
| Clarity in business | Healthcare (Khan et al. |
Fig. 2Most commonly recognised categories intervening in social sustainability