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How to make better decisions by using paradoxes

22.10.2024 María Franco and David Risi, two researchers at Bern University of Applied Sciences investigated how companies can make the most of difficult situations.

Key points in brief

  • Paradoxes arise from contradictory phenomena such as economic growth and environmental crisis, and their resolution is crucial for the future.
  • A 'both and' approach can help companies to balance economic, social and environmental concerns.
  • There is no single recipe for dealing with paradoxes, but certain mechanisms can help.

How did you come up with the idea of researching paradoxes?

David: We live in a complex world characterized by phenomena that are interrelated but fundamentally contradictory. Take economic growth with its ever-increasing use of resources and the ecological crisis as an example. The great challenge of our time is to find the best possible way to manage these paradoxes.

 

María: Understanding paradoxes can allow leaders to make better decisions. A “both/and” approach to paradoxes, rather than “either/or” thinking, can reveal new opportunities to leverage the interrelationships between economic, social, and environmental issues.

The great challenge of our time is to find the best possible way to manage these paradoxes.

David Risi
David Risi Professor for Responsible Management

That sounds good, but is still fairly abstract. What does it mean in concrete terms?

María: Consider a manufacturer of casting components, for example. A carefully designed product may provide economical, ecological, and social benefit at the same time – if it needs less energy, emits less CO2, and has low weight plus good ergonomics to protect workers’ health and safety.
 

David: Another example would be a raw materials supplier that recycles rare earth instead of mining it in the third world. Mining can harm the environment and is hazardous for workers. When material is recycled, more is left for future generations. Here too, ecological and social concerns go hand-in-hand. Last but not least, there is also an economic benefit from the reputational gain.

About the study

In their study, María Franco and David Risi place a particular focus on the connection between corporate social responsibility (CSR) and a circular economy.

Both are relevant for strengthening sustainability at the organisational level and thus promoting sustainable business development. However, how CSR and CE can be implemented in companies remains largely unexplored.

A careful evaluation of both concepts based on qualitative case studies reveals how CE and CSR can be managed simultaneously, i.e., by exploiting synergies between CSR and CE and overcoming barriers to their implementation. This is relevant in practice, as companies often face the challenge of implementing CSR and CE simultaneously.

How do I find the right way to deal with paradoxes as a practitioner or for my company? Are there such things as rules of thumb?

María: There is no silver bullet. But in our research, we identified organisational mechanisms like prevalent economic focus, legal compliance drivers, and strategic advantage perceptions. Practitioners can leverage these mechanisms to bring about mindset shifts within their organisations.

For example, reframing sustainability initiatives in terms of their strategic benefits could help foster greater integration between paradoxical demands.

 

David: In some cases, economic constraints or regulations are very strong, so that they dictate where the focus must be placed. A clear focus also makes sense, when  environmental or social concerns are part of the core business or DNA of the organisation.

For example, depending on their history and values, Community Food Initiatives could prioritize either environmental goals such as supporting local producers, or social justice goals such as helping food-insecure consumers.

Social or ecological benefits can foster reputation and thus lead to economic benefit.

María Franco
María Franco Tenure-Track Professor of Circular Economy

What other factors are there?

Other companies may tend to address socials matters first, if they seem to be low-hanging fruits, like for instance an awareness campaign for gender equality. Ecological concerns like waste reduction, on the other hand, are often more difficult to implement, but they have the advantage of being easier to quantify.

Another perceived strategic advantage that can help to shift mindsets to a more synergetic view is reputation: social or ecological benefits can foster reputation and thus lead to economic benefit.

The BFH Junior Scholar Programme

Innovations are often the result of collaboration between experts from different disciplines.

With the ‘Junior Scholars Programme: BFH transversal’ programme, Bern University of Applied Sciences BFH supports young researchers who work on collaborative, research projects involving multiple Schools. In this way, BFH promotes inter-School careers and makes concrete contributions to socially relevant transformation processes.

The study by María Franco and David Risi was funded by this programme.

Let’s take a look into the future: Companies are supposed to be good employers, protect the climate, and then earn money. Are expectations becoming increasingly taxing for companies? What can research do to help them?

David: Currently, we’re seeing grand societal challenges such as globalisation, digitalisation, and climate change. Paradoxes reflect the contradictory demands of today’s business environment. Our research can help organisations and individuals adapt in a complex world and successfully tackle society’s grand challenges.

María Franco and David Risi

María Franco

María Franco is a Tenure-Track Professor of Circular Economy at the School of Engineering and Information Technology (TI) at Bern University of Applied Sciences. She received her doctorate in 2018 from the University of Zurich and joined BFH that same year as a postdoc researcher for the EU Horizon 2020 project CIRCUSOL.

María’s research focuses on the transformations towards a circular economy, both in technical and biological systems, with the support of quantitative methodologies such as environmental Lifecycle Assessment and System Dynamics. She teaches Machine and Business Ethics, Sustainable Engineering and “Wie sieht unsere Energiezukunft aus?” at BFH-TI, as well as Transdisciplinary Research and Circular Supply Chains (co-lecturer) in the Master in Circular Innovation and Sustainability (MCis).

Since 2019, María also works as the International Advisor for WING, assisting incoming and outgoing exchange students in the process of finding, applying, and getting settled at BFH or abroad.

David Risi

David Risi is a Professor of Responsible Management at Bern University of Applied Sciences (Business) and a Habilitated Lecturer (Privatdozent) at the University of St. Gallen. He received his doctorate and habilitation from the University of St. Gallen and won the 2017 Academy of Management Social Issues in Management Best Dissertation Award.

David’s work has appeared in numerous practice-oriented outlets (e.g., Harvard Business Review) and leading academic journals (e.g., Journal of Management Studies). He held a senior researcher position at the University of Oxford and leads major research projects (some supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation). He teaches at leading universities in Switzerland and abroad and works closely with industry partners, speaks on practice panels, and takes on consultancy mandates.

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