spot_img
spot_img
spot_img
HomeInsightsRe-imagining Marketing Scholarship in the era of the UN Sustainable ...

Re-imagining Marketing Scholarship in the era of the UN Sustainable Development Goals

Ranjit Voola1, Jamie Carlson2, Fara Azmat3, Liem Viet Ngo4,
Kylie Porter5 and Ashish Sinha6

Abstract

The pandemic, rising inequalities, climate change, consumer mistrust of brands, organizations and their intentions, pose important questions relating to marketing’s relevance and impact in the real world. Additionally, there are growing calls by global bodies, such as the UN, national governments, consumers, students, suppliers, and leading practitioners to re-imagine and broaden the role of business and marketing to consider benefits to stakeholders (consumers, suppliers, employees, community, as well as shareholders). In this editorial, we contend that the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (UN SDGs) framework has the potential to address the myriad of challenges identified by marketing scholars and practitioners. With the assistance of quotes from marketing scholars, non-marketing scholars, marketing students and practitioners, we offer a rationale for a proactive and considered engagement by marketing scholarship, with the UN SDGs. We then introduce the six papers included in this special issue. We conclude by calling for further critical inquiry at the marketing-SDGs interface including; 1) Re-imagining the philosophy of marketing and marketing education; 2) Marketing capabilities and the SDGs; 3) Understanding consumer behavior, and 4) Learning across contexts.

Keywords
SDGs, marketing scholarship, re-imagining marketing

Download PDF: Re-imagining Marketing Scholarship in the era of the UN Sustainable Development Goals

RELATED ARTICLES

Weather

Australia
overcast clouds
35.7 ° C
35.7 °
35.7 °
21 %
3.6kmh
97 %
Sat
34 °
Sun
28 °
Mon
32 °
Tue
37 °
Wed
32 °

CALENDAR

LATEST NEWS

Rõ biết 250

Rõ biết 249

Rõ biết 248

spot_img

About Me

Quick Links

Stay connected

16,985FansLike
2,458FollowersFollow
61,453SubscribersSubscribe