Login

The Emergence of Trade Associations as Agents of Environmental Performance Improvement

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.author Nash, Jennifer
dc.date.accessioned 2002-08-26T15:40:39Z
dc.date.available 2002-08-26T15:40:39Z
dc.date.issued 2002-08-26T15:40:39Z
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/1604
dc.description.abstract This paper explores a surprising phenomenon: the emergence of trade associations as agents of environmental performance improvement. Trade associations in the United States have historically fought environmental regulation, not embraced it. Trade associations are generally organized to service the needs of their members, not control their behavior. Yet, since the late 1980s, seven trade associations representing manufacturing sectors have enacted codes of practice with the stated goal of enhancing member companies' environmental performance. Four of these codes have been developed by trade associations in the chemicals sector. The other trade associations represent oil, forestry, and textile industries. This paper explores why and how trade associations have attempted to exert authority over members' environmental performance. First, the specific factors that caused each trade association to develop its code are discussed. Second, the codes are compared in terms of three dimensions: the environmental practices they require, the techniques used to share values and practices among members, and the authority structures used to ensure compliance. A final section offers observations about the conditions under which codes are likely to emerge and considers their implications for public policy. By seeing where and how this trade association activity is emerging, it is possible to begin to understand the limits, and the potential, of this approach as a tool for moving firms in the direction of environmental performance improvement and sustainability. en
dc.description.provenance Made available in DSpace on 26-Aug-2002 15:40:39 (GMT). en
dc.description.provenance Submitted by Patti Proven (pproven@mit.edu). DSpace accession date: 26-Aug-2002 15:40:39 (GMT) Submission has 1 bitstreams: Codes_inventory_report_rev.doc: 208384 bytes, checksum: 254776cd12239203fc3dd7d8aec43719 (MD5) en
dc.description.sponsorship Performance Incentives Division, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency en
dc.format.extent 208384 bytes
dc.format.mimetype application/msword
dc.language.iso en_US
dc.subject Technology, Business, and Environment Program en
dc.subject trade associations en
dc.subject codes inventory en
dc.title The Emergence of Trade Associations as Agents of Environmental Performance Improvement en

Files in this item

Files Size Format
Codes_inventory_report_rev.doc 208.3Kb application/msword

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

  • CTPID Archive
    Materials from early CTPID research, former programs, and associated scholars

Show simple item record

Search DSpace@MIT


Advanced Search

Browse

My Account

Links