Frontiers in Psychology (May 2021)

Fostering Cultures of Sustainability in a Multi-Unit Office Building: A Theory of Change

  • Bianca Christel Dreyer,
  • Bianca Christel Dreyer,
  • Manuel Riemer,
  • Manuel Riemer,
  • Brittany Spadafore,
  • Brittany Spadafore,
  • Joel Marcus,
  • Devon Fernandes,
  • Allan Taylor,
  • Stephanie Whitney,
  • Sean Geobey,
  • Aisling Dennett

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.624311
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

Read online

Psychological approaches to fostering sustainability are heavily focused on individual behaviors and often insufficiently address the physical and social contexts individuals are embedded in. This limits the ability to create meaningful, long-lasting change, as many of day-to-day behaviors are social practices embedded in broader cultural norms and systems. This is particularly true in the work context, where organizational cultures heavily condition both the actions of individual employees and the collective actions of organizations. Thus, we argue cultures, not behaviors, must become the focus of sustainability change efforts. In this paper, we present a theory of change aimed at fostering strong organizational cultures of sustainability (COS) within a high-performance multi-tenant office building. Our theory takes a systems perspective that incorporates the social and physical aspects of the work environment, and views culture change as a co-creative exercise involving engagement of multiple stakeholders. The paper concludes with implications for practice and research.

Keywords