All Stories

  1. Resource shifting: Resourcification and de-resourcification for degrowth
  2. An ecofeminist position in critical practice: Challenging corporate truth in the Anthropocene
  3. The significance of trying : How organizational members meet the ambiguities of diversity
  4. Media Review
  5. A resourcification manifesto: Understanding the social process of resources becoming resources
  6. Material affordances in circular products and business model development: for a relational understanding of human and material agency
  7. Critiques of the circular economy
  8. Resourcification: A non‐essentialist theory of resources for sustainable development
  9. Organizing Means–Ends Decoupling: Core–Compartment Separations in Fast Fashion
  10. The Normality of Industrial and Commercial Waste: Economic, Technical and Organisational Barriers to Waste Prevention
  11. Towards clean material cycles: Is there a policy conflict between circular economy and non-toxic environment?
  12. Introduction to the special issue on the contested realities of the circular economy
  13. Guest editorial
  14. Qualification as corporate activism: How Swedish apparel retailers attach circular fashion qualities to take-back systems
  15. Waste as scats: For an organizational engagement with waste
  16. Waste policies gone soft: An analysis of European and Swedish waste prevention plans
  17. Thank you: A journal is as good as its reviewers
  18. « For the women » - In Memoriam Simone Veil (1927-2017)
  19. Stories of Achievements
  20. When lock-ins impede value co-creation in service
  21. A decoupling perspective on circular business model implementation: Illustrations from Swedish apparel
  22. Plastic Water: The Social and Material Life of Bottled Water, by Gay Hawkins, Emily Potter, and Kane Race
  23. Evidencing the waste effect of Product-Service Systems (PSSs)
  24. Barbara Czarniawska: Organizational Change – Fashions, Institutions, and Translations
  25. The Role of Valuation Practices for Risk Identification
  26. Creating local definitions of sustainability
  27. An analysis of 52 Swedish waste prevention initiatives.
  28. Acting on distances: A topology of accounting inscriptions
  29. Barbara Czarniawska
  30. Narrative Approaches to Organizations
  31. Book Review
  32. Managing the politics of value propositions
  33. Dis-Ag-reement: the construction and negotiation of risk in the Swedish controversy over antibacterial silver
  34. Gibson Burrell (2013), Styles of Organizing: The Will to Form. Oxford: Oxford University Press CORVELLEC, Hervé
  35. Hervé CORVELLEC (2013), What is Theory? Answers from the Social and Cultural Sciences, Copenhagen: Copenhagen Business School Press.
  36. Book Review: Organizations and Archetypes
  37. Effective Risk Communication
  38. Infrastructures, lock-in, and sustainable urban development: the case of waste incineration in the Göteborg Metropolitan Area
  39. Waste Management Companies: Critical Urban Infrastructural Services That Design the Sociomateriality of Waste
  40. The multiple market-exposure of waste management companies: A case study of two Swedish municipally owned companies
  41. Demanding hosts and ungrateful guests – the everyday drama of public transportation in three acts and academic prose
  42. Book review
  43. From “less landfilling” to “wasting less”
  44. The practice of risk governance: lessons from the field
  45. The European Waste Hierarchy: From the Sociomateriality of Waste to a Politics of Consumption
  46. The business model of solid waste management in Sweden – a case study of two municipally-owned companies
  47. Even beyond humanity – a comment on ‘Change and commitment: beyond risk and responsibility’ by Silvio Funtowicz and Roger Strand
  48. The narrative structure of risk accounts
  49. Responsibility Beyond CSR
  50. A relational theory of risk
  51. Organizational Risk as it Derives from What Managers Value: A Practice-Based Approach to Risk Assessment
  52. The moral responsibility of project selectors
  53. Book Review: Alain de Botton The Pleasures and Sorrows of Work London: Hamish Hamilton, Penguin, 2009. 336pp. ISBN: 0241143535; 13 digit ISBN: 978-0241143537. £18.99 (hb)
  54. The practice of risk management: Silence is not absence
  55. The risk/no-risk rhetoric of environmental impact assessments (EIA): the case of offshore wind farms in Sweden
  56. Sensegiving as mise-en-sens—The case of wind power development
  57. The impossibility of corporate ethics: for a Levinasian approach to managerial ethics
  58. Arguing for a license to operate: the case of the Swedish wind power industry
  59. For a symmetrical understanding of organizing and arguing
  60. The Power of Tale — Using Narrative for Organisational Success. Allan Julie, Fairtlough Gerard and Heinzen Barbara. Wiley, Chichester, UK 2002 Storytelling in Organizations. Gabriel Yannis. Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK, 2000
  61. Management gurus and management fashions—a dramatistic inquiry.
  62. Narratives of organizational performance
  63. Pandemonium—towards a retro-organization theory
  64. Talks on tracks - debating urban infrastructure projects∗
  65. Conference Reports
  66. Recycling food waste into biogas, or how management transforms overflows into flows
  67. Normalising Excess: An Ambivalent Take on the Recycling of Food Waste into Biogas
  68. From 'A Farewell to Landfill' to 'A Farewell to Wastefulness' - Societal Narratives, Socio-Materiality and Organizations
  69. The Waste Hierarchy Model: Disassembling and Reassembling the Socio-Materiality of Waste
  70. Waste management: the other of production, distribution and consumption
  71. Sustainability Objects as Performative Definitions of Sustainability: The Case of Food Waste-Based Biogas and Biofertilizers.