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Title Circular economy promotion and disclosure among Canadian municipalities
ID_Doc 813
Authors Radu, C; Lux, G
Title Circular economy promotion and disclosure among Canadian municipalities
Year 2024
Published
Abstract PurposeMunicipalities have the potential to become models of the circular economy (CE). This paper aims to examine the impact of the municipal council's characteristics on municipal CE disclosure and promotion.Design/methodology/approachThis paper is based on the resource dependence and upper echelons theories. For a sample of the 100 largest cities in Canada, a mixed methodology is used to code and analyze data and test the hypotheses.FindingsMunicipal councillors' education and experience related to the environment or sustainability are both likely to affect CE disclosure, and their sector membership (public or private) moderates the relationship between CE disclosure and councillors' experience. This experience may be reinforced by membership in the private sector, which has applied CE principles more extensively than the public sector has. Municipal councils with a greater number of councillors from the private sector appear to perform better in matters of transparency and to disclose more CE information on their public websites.Practical implicationsMunicipalities could use the findings to foster their transition to CE by implementing a CE-related training plan for their councillors. A CE-dedicated section on their websites could improve transparency and inform and educate residents about CE.Social implicationsThe public sector could learn from the private sector's best practices regarding CE.Originality/valueThis paper contributes to the literature by providing empirical evidence of the transparency and engagement of municipalities toward CE. The authors extend the resource dependence and upper echelons theories to a new context, that of public organizations.
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