Collection HAL Kedge Business School
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    2162 research outputs found

    Museums and Corporate Partners: The Case of Van Gogh Museum and Shell

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    International audienc

    Understanding the evolution of competing institutional logics in the marketization of care: A stage model analysis of Australia's national disability insurance scheme

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    International audienceThis study explores the marketization of healthcare through a stage model analysis, focusing on Australia's National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS). By employing mixed methods, including sentiment and frequency analysis as well as qualitative content analysis of policy documents and media coverage, we trace the NDIS's evolution and the interplay of competing social welfare and market logics over time. Our findings underline that the evolution and interplay between competing institutional logics follow a stage model of institutional change, detailing pre-emergence, orientation, contestation, consolidation, and normalization phases. Additionally, we observe a shift in dominant institutional logics across different stages, demonstrating the critical role of media and public sentiment in shaping discourse about the marketization of care, which intertwines with policy decision-making. Our findings emphasize the importance of adaptive engagement and communication strategies by policymakers to avoid marginalizing vulnerable groups as institutional logics evolve, especially in the latter stages of the process when a dominant logic has emerged. The study highlights the complex dynamics of institutional change and offers insights for both researchers and practitioners in the healthcare sector, shedding light on the coevolution of competing logics in the policy development and implementation process

    Sensemaking along global supply chains: implications for the ability of the MNE to manage sustainability challenges

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    International audienceMultinational enterprises (MNEs) are increasingly called upon to address sustainability issues along their supply chains. We advance prior literature on this topic by building on the argument that comprehending individual-level sensemaking is the foundational step for understanding the design and execution of corporate sustainability strategy. Hence, we undertook a qualitative study of one European agri-food MNE and captured how internal and external stakeholders along two entire supply chain segments, reaching into India and Ethiopia, respectively, make sense of farmer livelihoods as one particular sustainability issue. Using Weick’s stages of sensemaking as our theoretical lens, we find a high degree of diversity in interpretations regarding (1) the nature of the sustainability challenge, (2) the MNE’s motives for addressing it, and (3) the potential solutions to it. However, consistent patterns emerge for the three sensemaking stages in relation to the individual’s position in the supply chain. As a result of our analysis, we develop a conceptual model that elucidates differences in sensemaking of sustainability challenges by actors at different positions along global supply chains. Building on our findings, we offer a detailed explanation of how individual sensemaking influences collective sensemaking and, in turn, the direction and effectiveness of corporate strategy on sustainability

    A Robust Asymptotic Control Model to Analyze Climate Policy with CDR Options

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    A three-region optimal economic growth model is proposed to represent the global energy transition to net-zero emissions when carbon dioxide removal (CDR) technologies are available. The main features of the model are (i) the representation of the economy and energy use with nested CES production functions; (ii) the representation of climate policy through the use of a safety cumulative emissions budget concept; and (iii) the introduction of an international emissions trading scheme for the implementation of climate policy. Using an infinite horizon optimal control paradigm, several contrasting scenarios are analyzed both in an asymptotic steady state or "turnpike" point, and in an optimal transition to sustainability. This very compact model produces dynamic path simulations that are consistent with the main recommendations from IPCC for long term climate policies. The potential use of this simple model in future developments in climate and economic modeling is discussed

    ALL FOR ONE AND ONE FOR ALL? TOWARDS A COLLECTIVE VIEW OF ENTREPRENEURIAL PERSISTENCE

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    International audienceThe purpose of this paper is to shed light on the collective dynamics of commitment that underlie the survival of social ventures. We argue that the traditional individual/project nexus – associating business survival to individual persistenceis insufficient to account for the complexity of social entrepreneurship. Instead, we propose the concept of ‘collective persistence’ which emerges from the interaction of founders’ commitment profiles as they combine and evolve over time. Through a qualitative longitudinal study conducted on two emerging social ventures, we show that this collective persistence is shaped by the interplay between individual dynamics of commitment and decommitment, as well as by four collective dynamics of commitment: contagion, dilution, resonance, and transfer. Our research contributes to both social entrepreneurship and entrepreneurial persistence literature by offering a more nuanced and collective perspective on the development of new social venture facing precarious conditions

    Digital transformation: A multidisciplinary perspective and future research agenda

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    International audienceDigital transformation has had an unprecedented influence on all sectors of business over the last decade. We are now entering an era characterized by the extensive digital transformation of businesses, society, and consumers. Therefore, digital transformation has become a pivotal focus for organizations across various sectors in recent years. Despite differing scholarly perspectives on the concept and elements of digital transformation, a consensus exists that it significantly impacts consumer decisions and necessitates organizational adaptation. Recent challenges such as the COVID-1

    Cocréer des objets de médiation pour enquêter sur l’expérience de la dialyse à domicile : médias du codesign et transformation de la relation chercheur-participant

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    International audienceThis article focuses on interdisciplinary research through design on the experience of home dialysis and communication among patients, caregivers, and healthcare providers. First, we clarify the research needs and the necessity of a specific approach to consider the patient’s experience and make it unders- tandable and shareable. Using a co-design-based methodology, we present the research framework, co-created with patients in the context of the COVID-19pandemic from 2021 to 2023, and based on epistolary communication and photography. We also analyze the co-creation process of mediation objects and their role in transforming the relationship between the patient and the researcher. The results presented focus on the factitivity of co-design media, emphasizing their materiality to engage participants in collective inquiry and co-design workshops. We demonstrate how the materiality of these mediation objects has evolved following three forms of mediation in the participatory project : immersion, co-design, and communication.Cet article présente une recherche interdisciplinaire par le design sur l’expérience de la dialyse à domicile et la communication entre patients, aidants et soignants (PAS). Nous précisons d’abord le besoin de recherche sur cette pathologie et la nécessité d’une approche spécifique pour prendre en compte l’expérience-patient et la rendre compréhensible et partageable. À partir d’une méthodologie ancrée dans le codesign, nous présentons le dispositif d’enquête, cocréé avec les patients en contexte de pandémie de COVID-19 de 2021 à 2023, basé sur la communication épistolaire et la photographie. Nous analysons le processus de cocréation des objets de médiation et son rôle dans la transfor- mation des relations entre les patients et le chercheur. Les résultats présentés portent sur la factitivité des médias du codesign, en valorisant leur matérialité pour engager les participants dans l’enquête collective jusqu’aux ateliers de codesign. Nous montrons que la matérialité de ces objets de médiation a évolué en fonction de trois formes de médiation dans le projet participatif : s’immerger, coconcevoir et communiquer

    Sentiment de présence dans les organisations, évolution ou révolution ?

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    National audienc

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