Department

Michael A. Leven School of Management, Entrepreneurship and Hospitality

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

4-26-2025

Embargo Period

10-27-2025

Abstract

The hospitality industry’s global reach and resource-intensive operations have placed it under growing scrutiny for environmental impact. This empirical study examines how corporate governance influences corporate environmental citizenship (CEC) among eight major hotel companies across North America, Europe, and Asia from 2020 to 2023. Drawing on agency, stakeholder, institutional, and legitimacy theories, the study hypothesizes that stronger governance—measured by board independence, separation of CEO and Chair roles (non-duality), and ownership concentration—positively relates to environmental performance. A panel dataset of 32 firm-year observations is analyzed using regression models. The results show that higher board independence and greater ownership concentration are associated with significantly improved CEC index scores, while CEO duality corresponds with weaker environmental performance. The findings represent one of the first cross-national empirical demonstrations of governance–CEC links in hospitality, offering theoretical insights and practical guidance. Overall, the evidence suggests that robust governance mechanisms can serve as catalysts for environmental stewardship in the hotel sector.

Journal Title

Sustainability

Journal ISSN

2071-1050

Volume

17

Issue

9

First Page

3918

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

10.3390/su17093918

Comments

This article received funding through Kennesaw State University's Faculty Open Access Publishing Fund, supported by the KSU Library System and KSU Office of Research.

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