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Abstract: . . . http://www.nccp.ca/html/tables/pdf/options/customer_supplier_environmental_initiatives.pdf Page 19 References Akerlof, G., 1970, The Market for Lemons: Qualitative Uncertainty and the market Mechanism, Quarterly Journal of Economics 84, 488-500. Andrews, R.N.L., 2001, What Constitutes an “Effective” Certification Institution? How Should Effectiveness be Defined and Measured? 7 th Annual Colloquium on Environmental Law and Institutions, Certifications Institutions and private governance: New Dynamics in the Global Protection . . . . . . incentives and provide a new perspective on how the arguments à la Porter may influence the certification decision. Key-words: Agro-food industries, EMS, ISO 14001 certification, Voluntary instruments. JEL classification: L15; L59; Q59. Page 3 3 What Drives Agro-food Firms to Seek ISO 14001 Certification? 1. Introduction In wealthy post-industrial societies, firms need both a legal right and a ‘social license’ to operate (Gereffi et al., 2001; Grolleau et al., 2004). In response to these ‘new’ social . . . . . . and prediction performance does not vary heavily. [Insert Table 7 around here] 5. Concluding remarks and directions for future research We have presented empirical estimates of the impacts of various determinants on the ISO 14001 certification among agro-food firms in France. Our findings suggest that firm size, previous ISO 9000 certifications, customers’ demands, human resources management and regulatory compliance play a significant role in being ISO 14001 certified. At the survey date, ISO 14001 . . . . . . Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK. Palmer, K., Oates, W.E., Portney, P., 1995, Tightening Environmental Standards: The Benefit-Cost or the No-Cost Paradigm, Journal of Economic Perspectives (IX-4), 119-132. Paton, B., 2001, Efficiency Gains within Firms under Voluntary Environmental Initiatives, Journal of Cleaner Production 9, 167-178. Phanuel, D., 2001, La perception du management environnemental par le personnel de l’entreprise : modèle et application, Gestion 2000 , novembre-décembre, 33-48. . . . . . . inefficiencies in resource use. Nevertheless, one may argue that adoption is sufficient to reap these benefits and that completion until certification may be unnecessary. Despite this, we formulate the following hypothesis: H4: The more an organization seeks to improve its resource productivity, the greater its propensity to be ISO 14001 certified. Meeting customers’ demands Second, adopting an ecofriendly innovation may help a firm to serve a growing market of environmentally informed customers and . . . . . . Homison (1999) (Company data) Nakamura et al. (2001) (Company data) King and Lenox (2001a) (Facility data) Welch et al. (2002) (Facility data) Bansal and Hunter (2003) (Company data) Darnall (2003) (Company data) Firm size ns (-) s (+) s (+) s (+) . . ISO 9000 or other TQM certifications s (+) s (+) s (+) . . s (+) Exports . s (+) . . s (+) . Energy efficiency . ns (-) . . . . Competitiveness . . . ns (+) . . Advertising . ns (+) . . . . Public assistance ns (-) . . ns (-) . . Social responsibility . . . --3000,6,250,3455,56429
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