← Volver a resultados
Ficha bibliográfica · Consulta y acceso
Artículo

Culture or control? Asymmetric pathways to sustainability assurance in the luxury hospitality industry

Thanaphon Janthaduang et al · Taylor & Francis Group · 2026

Material complementario disponible
Lectura rápida. Revisá los datos básicos del recurso y luego accedé al contenido desde el botón principal. En esta ficha solo se muestra la información necesaria para identificar la obra, citarla y abrirla.

Acceso al recurso

Entrá al contenido desde la opción principal o elegí otra fuente disponible.

Acceso principal

Material complementario disponible

El enlace apunta a material asociado, anexos, tablas, datos o página complementaria. No se marca como libro/texto completo.
Abrir material

Resumen

Descripción general del contenido del recurso.

Sustainability is no longer peripheral to hotel operations; it is increasingly bound to service quality, operational credibility and competitive positioning. Yet how sustainability commitments are converted into reliable and auditable daily practice remains insufficiently understood, particularly in luxury hospitality. Addressing this gap, this study adopts a configurational perspective grounded in complexity theory to examine how psychological and organizational conditions combine to produce high sustainability assurance. Data were collected from 25 managerial informants in Thai five-star hotels and analyzed using fuzzy-set Qualitative Comparative Analysis (fsQCA). The results show that Attitude is a necessary but insufficient condition for high sustainability assurance, meaning that positive environmental orientation must be reinforced by wider social or organizational mechanisms to become operationally dependable. Three configurational pathways emerged: an Institutional Pathway combining Attitude, GHRM Incentives and QA Integration; a Cultural Pathway combining Attitude, Subjective Norms and QA Integration; and an Integrated Pathway combining all four conditions. Across all successful configurations, QA Integration appeared as a recurring structural anchor. Analysis of the negated outcome further confirmed causal asymmetry, showing that low Sustainability Assurance arises through distinct breakdown configurations rather than as the simple inverse of success. The study advances hospitality sustainability research by reframing sustainability assurance as a configured quality-management outcome and provides a practical basis for designing context-sensitive pathways to auditable green service delivery.

Cómo citar

Elegí el formato que necesitás y copiá la referencia al portapapeles.

APA 7

al, T. J. E. (2026). Culture or control? Asymmetric pathways to sustainability assurance in the luxury hospitality industry. https://doi.org/10.1080/23311975.2026.2665423

MLA

al, Thanaphon Janthaduang et. "Culture or control? Asymmetric pathways to sustainability assurance in the luxury hospitality industry." 2026. https://doi.org/10.1080/23311975.2026.2665423.

Chicago

al, Thanaphon Janthaduang et. 2026. "Culture or control? Asymmetric pathways to sustainability assurance in the luxury hospitality industry.". https://doi.org/10.1080/23311975.2026.2665423.

Harvard

al, T. J. E. 2026, Culture or control? Asymmetric pathways to sustainability assurance in the luxury hospitality industry, Taylor & Francis Group, available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/23311975.2026.2665423 [Accessed 28 Jun. 2026].

Compartir e imprimir

Guardá la ficha, copiá su enlace permanente o imprimila como PDF.

Exportar referencia

Si usás un gestor bibliográfico, podés exportar el registro en los formatos más comunes.

Detalles del recurso

Información bibliográfica útil para confirmar que se trata del material correcto.

Título
Culture or control? Asymmetric pathways to sustainability assurance in the luxury hospitality industry
Autor / colaboradores
Thanaphon Janthaduang et al
Editorial
Taylor & Francis Group
Año de publicación
2026
ISSN
2331-1975
ISSN
2331-1975
Idioma
eng

Materias

Explorá otros recursos relacionados a partir de estas materias.

Copiado