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Ali Alshehhi

Bio: Ali Alshehhi is an academic researcher from College of Business Administration. The author has contributed to research in topics: Corporate social responsibility & Corporate sustainability. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 2 publications receiving 199 citations.

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an analysis of the literature concerning the impact of corporate sustainability on corporate financial performance, and find that 78% of publications report a positive relationship between corporate sustainability and financial performance.
Abstract: This paper presents an analysis of the literature concerning the impact of corporate sustainability on corporate financial performance. The relationship between corporate sustainable practices and financial performance has received growing attention in research, yet a consensus remains elusive. This paper identifies developing trends and the issues that hinder conclusive consensus on that relationship. We used content analysis to examine the literature and establish the current state of research. A total of 132 papers from top-tier journals are shortlisted. We find that 78% of publications report a positive relationship between corporate sustainability and financial performance. Variations in research methodology and measurement of variables lead to the divergent views on the relationship. Furthermore, literature is slowly replacing total sustainability with narrower corporate social responsibility (CSR), which is dominated by the social dimension of sustainability, while encompassing little to nothing of environmental and economic dimensions. Studies from developing countries remain scarce. More research is needed to facilitate convergence in the understanding of the relationship between corporate sustainable practices and financial performance.

203 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an analysis of the literature concerning the impact of corporate sustainability on corporate financial performance, and find that 78% of publications report a positive relationship between corporate sustainability and financial performance.
Abstract: This paper presents an analysis of the literature concerning the impact of corporate sustainability on corporate financial performance. The relationship between corporate sustainable practices and financial performance has received growing attention in research, yet a consensus remains elusive. This paper identifies developing trends and the issues that hinder conclusive consensus on that relationship. We used content analysis to examine the literature and establish the current state of research. A total of 132 papers from top-tier journals are shortlisted. We find that 78% of publications report a positive relationship between corporate sustainability and financial performance. Variations in research methodology and measurement of variables lead to the divergent views on the relationship. Furthermore, literature is slowly replacing total sustainability with narrower corporate social responsibility (CSR), which is dominated by the social dimension of sustainability, while encompassing little to nothing of environmental and economic dimensions. Studies from developing countries remain scarce. More research is needed to facilitate convergence in the understanding of the relationship between corporate sustainable practices and financial performance.

103 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors reviewed 129 research papers published in different journals and attempted to identify drivers, issues, barriers, tensions, practices, and performances related to social sustainability in multi-tier supply chains.

160 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the influence of management innovation and technological innovation on organization performance with the mediating role of sustainability is examined, and the results indicate that sustainability plays a partial mediator role between management innovations and organization performance.
Abstract: Organizations have several objectives, including competitiveness, high profit and long-term survival. However, sustainability has become a diligent act of business and non-business organizations because it moves organizations toward superior performance. Sustainability does not come itself; it requires enough resources and capabilities. Extant studies have examined the factors that influence sustainability, but have rarely touched on innovation in this perspective. The present study examines the influence of management innovation and technological innovation on organization performance with the mediating role of sustainability. To test the model, we applied structural equation modeling in the analysis of a moment structures (AMOS) on the empirical evidence collected from 304 Pakistani CEOs and top managers. The results indicate that management innovation and technological innovation significantly positively contribute to sustainability and organization performance. Sustainability plays a partial mediating role between management innovation and organization performance and also a partial mediating role between technological innovation and organization performance. We recommend CEOs and top managers to give due attention to management innovation and technological innovation to enhance sustainability and survive the long run. Implications are discussed.

110 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed 56 relevant journal articles from the period 2015-2020 to determine to what ends the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) have impacted CSR research.
Abstract: Amidst a contemporary culture of climate awareness, unprecedented levels of transparency and visibility are forcing industrial organizations to broaden their value chains and deepen the impacts of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) initiatives. While it may be common knowledge that the 2030 agenda cannot be achieved on a business-as-usual trajectory, this study seeks to determine to what ends the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) have impacted CSR research. Highlighting linkages and interdependencies between the SDGs and evolution of CSR practice, this paper analyzes a final sample of 56 relevant journal articles from the period 2015–2020. With the intent of bridging policy and practice, thematic coding analysis has supported the identification and interpretation of key emergent research themes. Using three descriptive categorical classifications (i.e., single-dimension, bi-combination of dimensions, sustainability dimension), the results of this paper provide an in-depth discussion into strategic community, company, consumer, investor, and employee foci. Furthermore, the analysis provides a timely and descriptive overview of how CSR research has approached the SDGs and which ones are being prioritized. By deepening the understanding of potential synergies between business strategy, global climate agendas and the common good, this paper contributes to an increased comprehension of how CSR and financial performance can be improved over the long-term.

90 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors found empirical support for their contention that the link between stakeholder integration and financial performance is mediated by a firm's environmental sustainability orientation (ESO), and they also demonstrated that competitive intensity moderates the indirect relationship between stake-holder integration, in such a way that the indirect effect through environmental sustainability orientations is stronger for higher levels of industry competition.

84 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identified the specific goals considered by Japanese manufacturing multinational enterprises as a priority when establishing or significantly expanding operations in developing countries, such as the Philippines, Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam.

76 citations