Champions of Social Procurement in the Australian Construction Industry: Evolving Roles and Motivations
Auteur(s): |
Martin Loosemore
Robyn Keast Jo Barraket George Denny-Smith |
---|---|
Médium: | article de revue |
Langue(s): | anglais |
Publié dans: | Buildings, 23 novembre 2021, n. 12, v. 11 |
Page(s): | 641 |
DOI: | 10.3390/buildings11120641 |
Abstrait: |
There has been a recent proliferation of social procurement policies in Australia that target the construction industry. This is mirrored in many other countries, and the nascent research in this area shows that these policies are being implemented by an emerging group of largely undefined professionals who are often forced to create their own roles in institutional vacuums with little organisational legitimacy and support. By mobilising theories of how organisational champions diffuse innovations in other fields of practice, this paper contributes new insights into the evolving nature of these newly emerging roles and the motivations which drive these professionals to overcome the institutional inertia they invariably face. The results of semi-structured interviews, with fifteen social procurement champions working in the Australian construction industry, indicate that social procurement champions come from a wide range of professional backgrounds and bring diverse social capital to their roles. Linked by a shared sense of social consciousness, these champions challenge traditional institutional norms, practices, supply chain relationships, and traditional narratives about the concepts of value in construction. We conclude that, until normative standards develop around social procurement in the construction industry, its successful implementation will depend on external institutional pressures and the practical demonstration of what is possible in practice within the performative constraints of traditional project objectives. |
Copyright: | © 2021 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. |
License: | Cette oeuvre a été publiée sous la license Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 (CC-BY 4.0). Il est autorisé de partager et adapter l'oeuvre tant que l'auteur est crédité et la license est indiquée (avec le lien ci-dessus). Vous devez aussi indiquer si des changements on été fait vis-à-vis de l'original. |
0.29 MB
- Informations
sur cette fiche - Reference-ID
10646939 - Publié(e) le:
10.01.2022 - Modifié(e) le:
10.01.2022