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An empirical study of ‘green’ workplace behaviours: ability, motivation and opportunity
Author(s) -
Rayner Julie,
Morgan Damian
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
asia pacific journal of human resources
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.825
H-Index - 33
eISSN - 1744-7941
pISSN - 1038-4111
DOI - 10.1111/1744-7941.12151
Subject(s) - sustainability , business , human resource management , sample (material) , psychological intervention , perception , empirical research , environmental resource management , knowledge management , psychology , management , economics , ecology , philosophy , chemistry , epistemology , chromatography , neuroscience , psychiatry , biology , computer science
Green human resource management contributes to an understanding of the role of human resource management ( HRM ) towards sustainability and environmental outcomes. This paper assesses employees’ environmental knowledge as well as self‐perceptions of ability, motivation and opportunity ( AMO ) to practise green behaviours by operationalising the AMO framework towards a pro‐environmental agenda. The study draws on a survey sample of 394 employees from five organisations in regional Australia. Key findings show that pro‐environmental AMO are positively associated with green behaviours and that these are more prevalent at home than in the workplace. Further, line managers moderate the relationship between pro‐environmental AMO and green behaviour although not the relationship between environmental knowledge and green behaviour. Such benchmark measurement informs HRM policies, practices and interventions and contributes to environmental management.