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Alliance management capabilities in sustainability-oriented collaboration: problematization and new research directions

Alliance management capabilities in sustainability-oriented collaboration: problematization and new research directions
Alliance management capabilities in sustainability-oriented collaboration: problematization and new research directions
Sustainability-oriented collaboration, a heterogeneous set of formal interorganizational arrangements that vary considerably in size, membership, focus, and functioning, but share the same interest in addressing sustainability challenges of public concern, is becoming a mainstay of corporate agenda setting. Yet, the more firms interact on social and environmental issues, the more the burdens and tensions of collaborating for sustainability become apparent. Research and practice increasingly questions whether an alliance management capability (AMC) perspective can be adopted to explain variability in collaboration effectiveness. With the aim to investigate whether, and to what extent, existing sustainability-oriented collaboration research integrates or challenges mainstream theory on AMC, we adopt a problematization method to unpack the root assumptions underlying the AMC construct. We find that self-interest in economic value creation and capture, the need for homogeneity to favour knowledge accumulation and learning on alliance management, and predictable patterns of AMC deployment are consistently assumed by scholars to predict success in alliance management. Accordingly, we analyse AMC assumptions’ current integration in the study of sustainability-oriented collaboration, conducting a systematic literature review on collaborative capabilities developed for, during, and in response to sustainability challenges. In so doing, we identify what distinguishes sustainability-oriented collaboration from mainstream strategic alliances and the related implications on the collaborative capabilities firms should develop and deploy when dealing with sustainability challenges. We elaborate on these and their implications for AMC constructs to provide a future research agenda, which integrates further theoretical perspectives and broadens the scope of existing ones.
alliance management capability, strategic alliances, problematization, sustainability, sustainability-oriented collaboration
1460-8545
Costanzo, Laura A.
bce28c22-8b70-4176-b523-4e2f59169baf
Vurro, Clodia
5c43eb15-7a9d-4cea-88d2-2af131b5c448
Romito, Stefano
5fb86d3a-e66d-4075-a07a-33f57a6250b1
Ghobadian, Abby
909abc43-9c78-4f86-8ec4-2f47f3159d3d
Russo, Angelo
e24aac9d-bcfc-4faf-b59c-dab5d76159a8
Costanzo, Laura A.
bce28c22-8b70-4176-b523-4e2f59169baf
Vurro, Clodia
5c43eb15-7a9d-4cea-88d2-2af131b5c448
Romito, Stefano
5fb86d3a-e66d-4075-a07a-33f57a6250b1
Ghobadian, Abby
909abc43-9c78-4f86-8ec4-2f47f3159d3d
Russo, Angelo
e24aac9d-bcfc-4faf-b59c-dab5d76159a8

Costanzo, Laura A., Vurro, Clodia, Romito, Stefano, Ghobadian, Abby and Russo, Angelo (2023) Alliance management capabilities in sustainability-oriented collaboration: problematization and new research directions. International Journal of Management Reviews. (In Press)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Sustainability-oriented collaboration, a heterogeneous set of formal interorganizational arrangements that vary considerably in size, membership, focus, and functioning, but share the same interest in addressing sustainability challenges of public concern, is becoming a mainstay of corporate agenda setting. Yet, the more firms interact on social and environmental issues, the more the burdens and tensions of collaborating for sustainability become apparent. Research and practice increasingly questions whether an alliance management capability (AMC) perspective can be adopted to explain variability in collaboration effectiveness. With the aim to investigate whether, and to what extent, existing sustainability-oriented collaboration research integrates or challenges mainstream theory on AMC, we adopt a problematization method to unpack the root assumptions underlying the AMC construct. We find that self-interest in economic value creation and capture, the need for homogeneity to favour knowledge accumulation and learning on alliance management, and predictable patterns of AMC deployment are consistently assumed by scholars to predict success in alliance management. Accordingly, we analyse AMC assumptions’ current integration in the study of sustainability-oriented collaboration, conducting a systematic literature review on collaborative capabilities developed for, during, and in response to sustainability challenges. In so doing, we identify what distinguishes sustainability-oriented collaboration from mainstream strategic alliances and the related implications on the collaborative capabilities firms should develop and deploy when dealing with sustainability challenges. We elaborate on these and their implications for AMC constructs to provide a future research agenda, which integrates further theoretical perspectives and broadens the scope of existing ones.

Text
IJMR-21-0428.R3_Proof_hi - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 12 June 2023
Keywords: alliance management capability, strategic alliances, problematization, sustainability, sustainability-oriented collaboration

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 478871
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/478871
ISSN: 1460-8545
PURE UUID: 3b7ca11e-412d-46cb-9f12-3ff7b54b7817
ORCID for Laura A. Costanzo: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7197-6778

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 12 Jul 2023 16:31
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:34

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Contributors

Author: Clodia Vurro
Author: Stefano Romito
Author: Abby Ghobadian
Author: Angelo Russo

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