Lucia C. Burtnik Urueta , Lorraine Whitmarsh , Kostas Iatridis
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引用次数: 0
摘要
该研究考察了工作场所出行政策在减少通勤排放方面的作用。利用LSEG环境、社会和治理数据库(以前称为Refinitiv),我们分析了来自73个国家的2,932个组织的样本,以确定(a)工作场所旅行政策和(b)通勤减排的预测因素。利用政治和组织科学文献,我们研究了员工参与和信任在减少旅行排放中的作用。行业特征强烈影响政策的采用——专业服务公司实施运输政策的可能性是制造业公司的六倍(OR = 5.98, p < 0.001)。虽然这些政策与减排显著相关,但效应大小不大(Cohen’s d = 0.225, R2 = 0.0765)。值得注意的是,对雇主的信任是减排的重要预测因子(β = -0.122, p < 0.05),而传统的员工参与结构显示出有限的有效性。这些发现超出了当地案例研究的范围,表明成功的减排取决于政策设计和组织背景。
When commuting policies work: sector dynamics and trust associated with emission reductions
The study examines workplace travel policies’ role in cutting commuting emissions. Using the LSEG Environmental, Social and Governance database (previously known as Refinitiv), we analyze a sample of 2,932 organizations employing over 86 million people across 73 countries to identity predictors of (a) workplace travel policies, and (b) commuting emission reductions. Drawing on political and organizational science literatures, we examine the roles of employee involvement and trust in reducing travel emissions. Sector characteristics strongly influence policy adoption—professional services firms are six times more likely than manufacturing firms to implement transportation policies (OR = 5.98, p < 0.001). While these policies significantly correlate with emissions reductions, the effect size is modest (Cohen’s d = 0.225, R2 = 0.0765). Notably, trust in employers emerges as a significant predictor of emissions reductions (β = -0.122, p < 0.05), while traditional employee involvement structures show limited effectiveness. These findings extend beyond local case studies, suggesting successful emissions reduction depends on both policy design and organizational context.
期刊介绍:
Transportation Research Part D: Transport and Environment focuses on original research exploring the environmental impacts of transportation, policy responses to these impacts, and their implications for transportation system design, planning, and management. The journal comprehensively covers the interaction between transportation and the environment, ranging from local effects on specific geographical areas to global implications such as natural resource depletion and atmospheric pollution.
We welcome research papers across all transportation modes, including maritime, air, and land transportation, assessing their environmental impacts broadly. Papers addressing both mobile aspects and transportation infrastructure are considered. The journal prioritizes empirical findings and policy responses of regulatory, planning, technical, or fiscal nature. Articles are policy-driven, accessible, and applicable to readers from diverse disciplines, emphasizing relevance and practicality. We encourage interdisciplinary submissions and welcome contributions from economically developing and advanced countries alike, reflecting our international orientation.