Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7255564 | Technological Forecasting and Social Change | 2018 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
This paper examines the UK and Irish Environmental Protection Agencies (EPAs) ability to move beyond regulatory compliance to support and promote sustainable environmental innovation, in short “eco-innovation”. To do so would require them to overcome the perception that they face, often being perceived as 'policemen' by the regulated business community. We propose a new empirically-derived theoretical construct called Voluntary Reciprocal Legitimacy (VRL), defined as the development of mutual trust between the regulator and business resulting in arrangements which generate eco-innovation benefits for the regulator, the regulated business communities and society at large. VRL adds a new category to Suchman's (1995) theory of moral legitimacy as well as highlights how EPAs can build trust between themselves and regulated business, allowing a shift of the 'beyond compliance' legislative boundary. Such an approach supports eco-innovation whilst simultaneously protecting the natural environment.
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Authors
Chris Ball, George Burt, Frans De Vries, Erik MacEachern,