Chair ofResponsible Management Chair person note
We are living through an age of accelerating grand crises, rooted in severe social and environmental issues. Many of these issues and crises are caused by outrageously and tragically common irresponsible, unsustainable, and unethical logics of economic, business, and management practice: The growth paradigm, productivism, extractivism, managerialism, profit maximization, short termism, shareholder primacy, linear take-make-waste, instrumentalization of human beings and wider nature as mere resources to be exploited. The list is long and keeps expanding.
The purpose of the Chair for Responsible Management is to study, develop, and promote alternatives to these problematic logics of business and management. Examples for alternative more socially and environmentally desirable logics of practice can be found, among others, in humanistic, indigenous, biomimetic, post-growth, sufficiency, circular, rewilding, and stakeholder-democratic management, and restorative management logics, as well as the practices and business models shaped by them. We conduct engaged scholarship including research, teaching, and transfer work, harnessing the explanatory power of three main lenses, responsible management, alternative business models, and performative practices. We study these topics in the context of contemporary trends and forces, such as the twin transition of digitalization and sustainability.
- Prof. Dr. Oliver Laasch
The team
Behind left to right: Neeltje Rohlfes, Farrukh Mirzaev
Teaching
We offer the following courses:
Master in
International Sustainability Management
- Energy, Business, Climate, & Geopolitics
- Principles and Practices of Responsible Business and Management
- Biomimetic management
- Postgrowth management
- Responsible Management of AI and AI in Responsible Management
Research
Research Approach
We conduct engaged qualitative and mixed methods research aiming for the highest levels of both scientific rigour and practical relevance.
Research topics
Responsible management
We study more responsible, ethical, and sustainable alternative practices, such as biomimetic or humanistic management, responsible management innovation, or how management can learn from radical climate activism.
Digitalization ethics, responsibility, and sustainability
We study the responsible, sustainable, and ethical management of digital technologies (such as AI) and how digital technologies can enable more responsible, sustainable, and ethical management practices.
Alternative business models
We study business models built around alternative, non-commercial logics, such as sustainability business models, social enterprise models, or sports business models.
Research philosophy and qualitative methods
We explore the use of alternative ontologies, of performative research that shapes social realities as opposed to just describing them, as well as advanced qualitative analysis and theorizing methods.
Journal Article
2021
Exploring a posthumanist approach to social practices : "A commentary on Gherardi’s ‘How to Conduct a Practice-based Study?"
ORGANIZATION STUDIES, 2021, vol. 42(5), pp. 811-817
Journal Article
2021
From the editors: Interpreting our tradition.
ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT LEARNING AND EDUCATION, 2021, vol. 20(1), pp. 1-5
Journal Article
2021
Studying the ongoing change at the individual level: Who am I (becoming) as a management educator and researcher?
ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT LEARNING AND EDUCATION, 2021, vol. 20(4), pp. 497-500
Journal Article
2020
Constellations of transdisciplinary practices: A map and research agenda for the responsible management learning field
JOURNAL OF BUSINESS ETHICS, 2020, vol. 162, pp. 735-757
Journal Article
2020
Explaining the leopards’ spots: Responsibility-embedding in business model artefacts across spaces of institutional complexitys strategic response
LONG RANGE PLANNING, 2020, vol. 53(4)
Academic Articles
2020
Exploring a posthumanist approach to social practices : A commentary on Gherardi’s ‘How to Conduct a Practice-based Study?
ORGANIZATION STUDIES, 42(5), 811-817
Chapter
2020
Mapping the emerging field of responsible management
in The research handbook of responsible management., Edward Elgar, 2020
Chapter
2020
Mintzberg on responsible management
in The research handbook of responsible management., Laasch, O., Suddaby, R., Freeman, E., & Jamali, D. Eds Eds, Edward Elgar, 2020
Chapter
2020
Responsible management as re-enchantment and retrovation
in The research handbook of responsible management., Laasch, O., Suddaby, R., Freeman, E., & Jamali, D. Eds. Eds, Edward Elgar, 2020
Journal Article
2020
Responsible practices in the wild : An actor-network perspective on mobile apps in learning as translation(s)
JOURNAL OF BUSINESS ETHICS, 2020, vol. 161, pp. 253-277
Team and contact
Prof. Dr. Oliver Laasch
Academic Director, Master in International Sustainability Management
Visiting Scholars
Daiteng REN



