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  1. Not all green innovations are equally green: State ownership, green innovation generality and contingencies.Guannan Qu & Xin Pan - 2023 - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 32 (4):1532-1546.
    This research scrutinises the correlation between state ownership and the attributes of green innovation, specifically underscoring generality as a primary trait of innovation favoured by governments. Green innovation with generality, due to its applicability across diverse contexts at reduced expense, becomes an appealing strategy for states to address environmental concerns. Consequently, we suggest that state ownership encourages the prevalence of green innovation characterised by generality. Furthermore, we delve into two contingencies related to ascribed and achieved political connections, positing that they, (...)
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  • How Officials’ Political Incentives Influence Corporate Green Innovation.Shenggang Ren, Donghua Liu & Ji Yan - 2024 - Journal of Business Ethics 194 (3):633-653.
    Drawing on tournament theory, we argue that when environmental goals are incorporated into the cadre evaluation system, compared to officials who are close to retirement (i.e., retiring officials), non-retiring officials may exert more effort to foster risky green innovation. Based on a sample of publicly traded firms from heavily polluting industries in China between 2008 and 2016, we hypothesize and find that confronted with severe environmental pollution, firms in provinces with non-retiring governors have higher green innovation performance than those in (...)
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