PROVISIONAL CONTENTS Volume I 1. T. N. Gladwin, J. J. Kennelly, and T. S. Krause, ‘Shifting Paradigms for Sustainable Development: Implications for Management Theory and Research’, Academy of Management Review, 1995, 20, 874–907. 2. P. Shrivastava, ‘The Role of Corporations in Achieving Environmental Sustainability’, Academy of Management Review, 1995, 20, 4, 936–60. 3. I. Henriques and P. Sadorsky, ‘The Determinants of an Environmentally Responsive Firm: An Empirical Approach’, Journal of Environmental Economics & Management, 1996, 30, 3, 381–95. 4. P. Christmann, ‘Effects of "Best Practices" on Environmental Management on Cost Advantage: The Role of Complementary Assets’, Academy of Management Journal, 2000, 43, 4, 663–80. 5. S. Sharma and H. Vredenburg, ‘Proactive Corporate Environmental Strategy and the Development of Competitively Valuable Organizational Capabilities’, Strategic Management Journal, 1998, 19, 8, 729–53. 6. T. N. Gladwin, ‘The Meaning of Greening: A Plea for Organizational Theory’, in K. Fischer and J. Schot (eds.), Environmental Strategies for Industry: International Perspectives on Research Needs and Policy Implications (Island Press, 1993), pp. 37–61. 7. S. L. Hart, ‘A Natural-Resource-Based View of the Firm’, Academy of Management Review, 1995, 986–1014. 8. J. Aragón-Correa and S. Sharma, ‘A Contingent Resource-Based View of Proactive Corporate Environmental Strategy’, Academy of Management Review, 2003, 71–88. 9. M. V. Russo and P. A. Fouts, ‘A Resource-Based Perspective on Corporate Environmental Performance and Profitability’, Academy of Management Journal, 1997, 40, 534–59. 10. P. D. Jennings and P. A. Zandbergen, ‘Ecologically Sustainable Organizations: An Institutional Approach’, Academy of Management Review, 1995, 20, 4, 1015–52. 11. A. J. Hoffman, ‘Linking Organizational and Field-Level Analyses: The Diffusion of Corporate Environmental Practice’, Organization and Environment, 2001, 14/2, 133–56. 12. A. J. Hoffman, ‘Institutional Evolution and Change: Environmentalism and the US Chemical Industry’, Academy of Management Journal, 1999, 42, 4, 351–71. 13. M. Lounsbury, ‘Institutional Sources of Practice Variation: Staffing College and University Recycling Programs’, Administrative Science Quarterly, 2001, 46, 29–56. 14. R. K. Mitchell, B. R. Agle, and D. J. Wood, ‘Toward a Theory of Stakeholder Identification and Salience: Defining the Principle of Who and What Really Counts’, Academy of Management Review, 1997, 22, 853–86. 15. M. B. Clarkson, ‘A Stakeholder Framework for Analyzing and Evaluating Corporate Social Performance’, Academy of Management Review, 1995, 20, 92–117. 16. R. V. Aguilera, D. Rupp, C. A. Williams, and J. Ganapathi, ‘Putting the S Back in Corporate Social Responsibility: A Multi-Level Theory of Social Change in Organizations’, Academy of Management Review, 2007, 32, 3, 836–63. 17. D. Matten and A. Crane, ‘Corporate Citizenship: Toward an Extended Theoretical Conceptualization’, Academy of Management Review, 2005, 30, 1, 166–79. Volume Ii 18. D. Matten and J. Moon, ‘ "Implicit" and "Explicit" CSR: A Conceptual Framework for a Comparative Understanding of Corporate Social Responsibility’, Academy of Management Review, 2008, 33, 2, 404–24. 19. A. B. Carroll, ‘A Three Dimensional Model of Corporate Social Performance’, Academy of Management Review, 1979, 4, 497–505. 20. S. B. Banerjee, ‘Corporate Social Responsibility: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly’, Critical Sociology, 2008, 34, 1, 51–79. 21. P. Bansal and K. Roth, ‘Why Companies go Green: A Model of Ecological Responsiveness’, Academy of Management Journal, 2000, 43, 717–36. 22. M. Starik and G. P. Rands, ‘Weaving an Integrated Web: Multilevel and Multisystem Perspectives of Ecologically Sustainable Organizations’, Academy of Management Review, 1995, 20, 4, 908–35. 23. C. P. Egri and L. T. Pinfield, ‘Organizations and the Biosphere: Ecologies and Environments’, in S. R. Clegg, C. Hardy, and W. R. Nord (eds.), Handbook of Organization Studies (Sage, 1996), pp. 459–83. 24. M. Starik, ‘Should Trees Have Managerial Standing? Toward Stakeholder Status for Non-Human Nature’, Journal of Business Ethics, 1995, 14, 207–17. 25. J. D. Margolis and J. P. Walsh, ‘Misery Loves Companies: Rethinking Social Initiatives by Business’, Administrative Science Quarterly, 2003, 48, 2, 268–305. 26. M. E. Porter and C. van der Linde, ‘Toward a New Conception of the Environment-Competitiveness Relationship’, Journal of Economic Perspectives, 1995, 94, 97–118. 27. S. A. Waddock and S. B. Graves, ‘The Corporate Social Performance-Financial Performance Link’, Strategic Management Journal, 1997, 18, 303–19. 28. A. A. King and M. J. Lenox, ‘Does it Really Pay to be Green? An Empirical Study of Firm Environmental and Financial Performance’, Journal of Industrial Ecology, 2001, 5/1, 105–16. 29. M. L. Barnett and R. M. Salomon, ‘Beyond Dichotomy: The Curvilinear Relationship Between Social Responsibility and Financial Performance’, Strategic Management Journal, 2006, 27, 11, 1101–22. 30. D. Wood, ‘Corporate Social Performance Revisited’, Academy of Management Review, 1991, 16, 4, 691–718. 31. R. W. Hahn and R. N. Stavins, ‘Incentive-Based Environmental Regulation: A New Era from an Old Idea’, Ecology Law Quarterly, 1991, 18, 1, 1–42. 32. D. Mackenzie, ‘Making Things the Same: Gases, Emission Rights and the Politics of Carbon Markets’, Accounting, Organizations and Society, 2009, 4, 3–4, 440–55. 33. A. A. King and M. J. Lenox, ‘Industry Self-Regulation Without Sanctions: The Chemical Industry’s Responsible Care Program’, Academy of Management Journal, 2000, 43, 4, 698–716. 34. M. A. Delmas, ‘The Diffusion of Environmental Management Standards in Europe and in the United States: An Institutional Perspective’, Policy Sciences, 2002, 35/1, 91–119. 35. N. Darnall and S. Sides, ‘Assessing the Performance of Voluntary Environmental Programs: Does Certification Matter?’, Policy Studies Journal, 2008, 36/1, 95–117. 36. C. J. Corbett and D. A. Kirsch, ‘International Diffusion of ISO 14000 Certification’, Production and Operations Management, 2001, 10/3, 327–42. Volume Iii 37. C. B. Bhattacharya and S. Sen, ‘Consumer-Company Identification: A Framework for Understanding Consumers’ Relationships with Companies’, Journal of Marketing, 2003, 67, 4, 76–88. 38. S. George, ‘The Social Shaping of Household Consumption’, Ecological Economics, 1999, 28, 3, 455–66. 39. S. Yearly, ‘Green Ambivalence about Science: Legal-Rational Authority and the Scientific Legitimation of a Social Movement’, British Journal of Sociology, 1992, 43, 511–32. 40. W. D. Sine and B. H. Lee, ‘Tilting at Windmills? The Environmental Movement and the Emergence of the U.S. Wind Energy Sector’, Administrative Science Quarterly, 2009, 54, 123–55. 41. P. Wapner, ‘Politics Beyond the State: Environmental Activism and World Civic Politics’, World Politics, 1995, 47, 311–40. 42. J. A. Howard-Grenville, ‘Inside the "Black Box": How Organizational Culture and Subcultures Inform Interpretations and Actions on Environmental Issues’, Organization & Environment, 2006, 19, 46–73. 43. S. Maguire and C. Hardy, ‘Discourse and Deinstitutionalization: The Decline of DDT’, Academy of Management Journal, 2009, 52, 148–78. 44. P. Bansal and I. Clelland, ‘Talking Trash: Legitimacy, Impression Management, and Unsystematic Risk in the Context of the Natural Environment’, Academy of Management Journal, 2004, 47, 1, 197–218. 45. S. Sharma, ‘Managerial Interpretations and Organizational Context as Predictors of Corporate Choice of Environmental Strategy’, Academy of Management Journal, 2000, 43, 681–97. 46. C. Egri and S. Herman, ‘Leadership in the North American Environmental Sector: Values, Leadership Styles, and Contexts of Environmental Leaders and their Organizations’, Academy of Management Journal, 2000, 43, 4, 571–604. 47. S. B. Banerjee, ‘Managerial Perceptions of Corporate Environmentalism: Interpretations from Industry and Strategic Impli