On How Personal Values and Sustainability Conceptions Impact Students’ Sustainability Management Orientation Evidence from Germany, Indonesia and the United States
Date
2019Author
Seidel, Jan
Sundermann, Anna
Brieger, Steven A.
Strathoff, Pepe
Jacob, Gabriel H.
Antonio, Tony
Utami, Ch. Whidya
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Purpose – This paper aims to develop and empirically test a framework on how personal values and
sustainability conceptions affect students’ sustainability management orientation (SMO). An understanding
of this connection gives insight into the question whether students are likely to engage in sustainable business
practices in their future work.
Design/methodology/approach – A cross-sectional and comparative research design is used, using
survey data of business students from Germany, Indonesia and the USA (N = 475). The proposed mediation
models are tested by bootstrap procedures using Hayes’s (2013) PROCESS macro for SPSS.
Findings – Self-transcendence values translate into more nuanced sustainability conceptions since
individuals with self-transcendence values are more likely to conceptualize sustainability beyond their own
(narrow) self-interests. In turn, the stronger individuals’ sustainability conceptions, the higher the likelihood
that they prefer sustainable management practices in their future professional working field.
Research limitations/implications – Implications arise for researchers to investigate the engagement
of future managers with different personal value types in sustainability practices and to gain insights into
values and sustainability conceptions as a learning outcome. Limitations of this research – for instance,
arising from potential common method bias – are discussed.
Practical implications – The findings point to the need to (re-)design appointment processes for
management positions in a way that allows taking into account individuals’ personal values and
sustainability conceptions. This research may also help firms and higher education institutions to empower
their workforce/students to develop more integrated perspectives on sustainability challenges as well as
teaching methods that address students’ effective learning outcomes, e.g. their values.
Originality/value – The paper offers a new framework and a cross-country perspective on psychological
antecedents of individuals’ SMO as an important prerequisite for responsible behavior in the business context.

