“That is Not What I Live For”: How Lower-Level Green Employees Cope with Identity Tensions at Work
- Research on green identity work has so far concentrated on sustainability managers and/or top-management actors. How lower-level green employees cope with identity tensions at work is, as yet,Research on green identity work has so far concentrated on sustainability managers and/or top-management actors. How lower-level green employees cope with identity tensions at work is, as yet, under-researched. The paper uses an identity work perspective and a qualitative empirical study to identify four strategies that lower-level employees use in negotiating and enacting their green identities at work. Contrary to expectations, lower-level green employees engage substantially in job crafting as a form of identity work despite their limited discretion. In addition, the study demonstrates that lower-level green employees make use of identity work strategies that uphold rather than diminish perceived misalignment between their green identities and their job context.…


| Author: | Susanne BlazejewskiORCiD, Franziska Dittmer, Anke Buhl, Andrea Simone Barth, Carsten HerbesORCiD |
|---|---|
| DOI: | https://doi.org/10.3390/su12145778 |
| ISSN/eISSN: | 2071-1050 |
| Parent Title (English): | Sustainability |
| Publisher: | MDPI AG |
| Document Type: | Article |
| Language: | English |
| Date of Publication (online): | 2020/07/17 |
| Publishing Institution: | Hochschule Nürtingen-Geislingen |
| Release Date: | 2023/02/21 |
| Tag: | corporate sustainability; green employees; identity work; job crafting; lower-level employees |
| Volume: | 12 |
| Issue: | 14 |
| Article Number: | 5778 |
| Institutes: | Fakultät Betriebswirtschaft und Internationale Finanzen |
| open access: | ja |
| Licence (German): | Creative Commons - CC BY - Namensnennung 4.0 International |



