“i care about nature, but disengaging values in assessing opportunities that cause harm

Dean A. Shepherd, Holger Patzelt, Robert A. Baron

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

Abstract

Some managers and entrepreneurs decide to act in ways that result in harm to the natural environment, despite the fact that such actions violate their own values. Building on moral self-regulation theory (Bandura, 1991), we propose that entrepreneurs’ assessments of the attractiveness of opportunities that harm the natural environment depend on the simultaneous impact of values and personal agency. By cognitively disengaging their pro-environmental values, decision makers (i.e., entrepreneurs) can (under certain circumstances) perceive opportunities that harm the environment as highly attractive and thus suitable for exploitation. The results of a judgment task that generated 1,264 opportunity assessments nested within 83 business founders offered support for this general prediction and indicated that the extent of founders’ disengagement of their pro-environmental values was stronger when they had high, rather than low, entrepreneurial self-efficacy, and stronger when industry munificence was perceived as low rather than high. We discuss our new measure of moral disengagement in a decision-making context and the implications of the study’s findings for extant literatures on moral disengagement and sustainable entrepreneurship.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationA Psychological Approach to Entrepreneurship
Subtitle of host publicationSelected Essays of Dean A. Shepherd
PublisherEdward Elgar Publishing Ltd.
Pages1251-1273
Number of pages23
ISBN (Electronic)9781783479801
ISBN (Print)9781783479795
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2014

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