Skip to Main Content

CBS PhD School logo

Perspectives on Governance and Sustainable Development - 5 ECTS


Date and time

Monday 18 November 2024 at 08:30 to Friday 22 November 2024 at 15:00

Registration Deadline

Monday 7 October 2024 at 23:55

Location

Dalgas Have - room DHV 2.69, 2.70 & 2.71 (second floor), Dalgas Have 15, 2000 Frederiksberg Dalgas Have - room DHV 2.69, 2.70 & 2.71 (second floor)
Dalgas Have 15
2000 Frederiksberg

Perspectives on Governance and Sustainable Development - 5 ECTS


Course coordinator: Stefano Ponte & Jeremy Moon, Department of Management, Society and Communication (MSC)

Faculty

Andreas Wieland (AW), Associate Professor of Supply Chain Risk Management
Department of Operations Management, CBS

Jeremy Moon (JM), Professor of Sustainability Governance
Department of Management, Society & Communication, CBS

Department of Management, Society and Communication, CBS
 
Department of Management, Society and Communication, CBS
 
Department of Management, Society and Communication, CBS

Department of Management, Society and Communication, CBS
 
Stefano Ponte (SP), Professor of International Political Economy
Department of Management, Society & Communication, CBS

Department of Management, Society and Communication, CBS 
 
Department of Management, Society and Communication, CBS 


Practitioners panel

  • Anna Maria Fibla Møller, Head of Responsible Investments, AP Pension
  • Erin Leitheiser, Associate Director Nature & Climate, Business for Social Responsibility; External Lecturer, MSC, CBS
  • Karen Jespersen, Adviser in sustainable value chains, Trade Council, DK Ministry of Foreign Affairs
  • Louise Thomsen, Sustainability advisor, LT Cambio, External Lecturer, MSC, CBS


Aim and content

This PhD course provides research students with an in-depth engagement with relevant frameworks, concepts and approaches to the topic of governance and sustainable development, with specific focus on the role of business.  It draws on the strengths of the CBS Sustainability Centre and the CBS Centre for Business and Development Studies (CBDS), but it will also bring in other guest faculty and practitioners.

The first part of the course opens with a survey of key perspectives on governance and sustainable development. It then proceeds by unpacking these perspectives through the lenses of: the role of corporations as governing actors; global value chains and sustainable development; humanitarian interventions & activism; and corporations and green transitions.  Overall, the course aims at enabling critical consideration of different theoretical and policy approaches to governance and sustainable development through a mix of theoretical and hands-on empirical engagements.   

Prerequisites

  • Only currently registered PhD students can participate in the course. 

  • The course is intended for students undertaking PhDs in the social sciences, including business and management studies. 

  • At the time of application, you are asked to submit an abstract for the paper you would like to present at the course, on a topic related to governing sustainable development (500 words max).

  • If you are accepted to the course, you will be expected to submit a paper (min 8 pages, max 20 pages – references excluded) that engages theoretically, methodologically and/or empirically with topics related to governing sustainable development (deadline for submission of the paper is Monday, 11 November 2024). 

  • To receive the course diploma, you will need to meet the above deadlines and attend the whole course.

Expectations

  • You are expected to have read all the assigned readings before the start of the course; for each of the sessions, one or more students will be asked to introduce the key points of one or more of the assigned papers to the group (details will follow);

  • You are expected to have read all student papers submitted to the course and be ready to provide engaged, sympathetic and constructive criticism during the student presentation sessions;

  • You are expected to actively engage in all discussion sessions related to lectures, panels and paper presentations.
     

Presentation and discussion plan

  • For each student paper: 10-minute presentation by the student; 15-minute feedback by the two assigned discussants (one faculty member and one student); 20 minutes for general discussion.
  • Lectures and panels are followed by an open discussion session facilitated by the assigned chair.
Literature: please see literature list for each of the sessions on Canvas. Most of the material is available in the ‘Course Readings’ space on Canvas. The rest is either accessible via a direct link from the bibliographic entry or attached as a pdf file in the relevant session.
 

Learning objectives

After participating in the course, the students will be able to:

  • Critically reflect on different theoretical and empirical perspectives on governance and sustainable development.
  • Critically reflect on different specific policy and strategic approaches to sustainable development.
  • Locate their own PhD. research in the context of wider theories, conceptualizations and debates about governance and sustainable development.
     

Draft Programme

Day 1 (Monday 18 November)

08.30 – 09.00

Coffee & Tea

 

09.00 – 10.00

Welcome & introductions

SP, JM

10:00 – 12.00

Part I: Overview
Session 1: Perspectives on governance and sustainable development

SP

12.00 – 13.00

Lunch

 

13.00 – 15.30

Student presentations I
(2 parallel sessions; 3 papers / session; 45 min / paper + break)

TBA

15.30 – 17.00

Part II: Corporations and sustainability governance
Session 2: Corporations making and taking sustainability governance

JM

Day 2 (Tuesday 19 November)

08.30 – 09.00

Coffee & Tea

 

09.00 – 10.30

Session 3: Corporate governance and sustainable development

TJ

10.30 – 10.45

Break

 

10.45 – 12.15

Ses sion 4: Corporations and the governance of international labour standards: post Rana Plaza disaster initiatives

JM

12.15 – 13.00

Lunch

 

13.00 – 15.30

Student presentations II

TBA

15.30 – 17.00

Special session: Panel discussion with representatives of business, government and NGOs

SP, JM

17.00 – 18.00

Reception

 

18.00

Optional Dinner (venue TBA)

 

Day 3 (Wednesday 20 November)

08.30 – 09.00

Coffee & Tea

 

09.00 – 10.30

Part III: Supply chains and sustainable development
Session 5: Business, power and sustainability

SP

10.30 – 10.45

Break

 

10.45 – 12.15

Session 6: Sustainability and innovation: A Schumpeterian perspective

LW

12.15 – 13.00

Lunch

 

13:00 – 14:30

Session 7: Sustainable supply chains and planetary boundaries

AW

14.30 – 16:30

Special session: The nuts and bolts of the profession: Successes and failures in academic publishing

SP, VG, JM

Day 4 (Thursday 21 November)

08.30 – 09.00

Coffee & Tea

 

09.00 – 10.30

Part IV: Humanitarian interventions & activism
Session 8: Why are humanitarian sentiments profitable and what does this mean for sustainable development?

LR

10.30 – 10.45

Break

 

10.45 – 12.15

Session 9: Activism and sustainable development

VG

12.15 – 13.00

Lunch

 

13.00 – 15.30

Student presentations III

TBA

15:30 – 17.00

Part V: Corporations and green transitions
Session 10: The circular economy

SV

Day 5 (Friday 22 November)

08.30 – 09.00

Coffee & Tea

 

09.00 – 10.30

Session 11: Governing climate change adaptation and mitigation

MF

10.30 – 10.45

Break

 

10:45 – 12.15

Session 12: Green finance and sustainable development

KJ

12.15 – 13.00

Lunch

 

13.00 - 15.00

Issues outstanding, conclusions, reflections, evaluation

SP, JM

 

Registration deadline and conditions

The registration deadline is 7 October 2024. If you want to cancel your registration on the course it should be done prior to this mentioned date. By this date we determine whether we have enough registrations to run the course, or who should be offered a seat if we have received too many registrations.

If there are more seats available on the course we leave the registration open by setting a new regsitration deadline in order to fill remaining seats. Once you have received our acceptance/welcome letter to join the course, your registration is binding and we do not refund your course fee. The binding registration date will be the registration deadline mentioned above.

Payment methods
 
Make sure you choose the correct method of payment upon finalizing your registration:
 
CBS students:
Choose payment method CBS PhD students and the course fee will be deducted from your PhD course budget.
 
Students from other Danish universities: 
Choose payment method Danish Electronic Invoice (EAN). Fill in your EAN number, attention and possible purchase (project) order number.
Do you not pay by EAN number please choose Invoice to pay via electronic bank payment (+71). 
 
Students from foreign universities:
Choose payment method Payment Card. Are you not able to pay by credit card please choose Invoice International to pay via bank transfer. 

Event Location

Click to view the event location on Google Maps >

Organizer Contact Information

CBS PhD School
Nina Iversen

Phone: +45 3815 2475
ni.research@cbs.dk

Organizer Contact Information

CBS PhD School
Nina Iversen

Phone: +45 3815 2475
ni.research@cbs.dk