TY - JOUR
T1 - Multispecies Organizing in the Web of Life
T2 - Ethico-Political Dynamics of Matters of Care in Ecologies-in-Place
AU - Ehrnström-Fuentes, Maria
AU - Böhm, Steffen
AU - Hagolani-Albov, Sophia
AU - Annala Tesfaye, Linda
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s), 2025.
PY - 2025/5/19
Y1 - 2025/5/19
N2 - Contemporary human-centered organization and management practices endanger the planet’s health, affecting the life and death of multiple species-including humans. Drawing on insights from multispecies ethnography and feminist new materialism, this article contributes to the business ethics literature by developing a theoretical framework for multispecies organizing as a matter of care. Going beyond existing understandings of human-animal relations, we show how ethico-political dynamics shape multispecies relations in three ways: how we and other species relate to ecologies-in-place (affective relationalities); what we and other species do (vital doings); and, finally, what kinds of worlds we-through our ethical sensibilities-commit to bringing into being (ethical obligations). Using an illustrative example of a rewilding site in England, this article shows how multispecies organizing plays out in a specific ecology-in-place. Our argument has important implications for the conception and contemporary practices of the organizational ethics of life and death.
AB - Contemporary human-centered organization and management practices endanger the planet’s health, affecting the life and death of multiple species-including humans. Drawing on insights from multispecies ethnography and feminist new materialism, this article contributes to the business ethics literature by developing a theoretical framework for multispecies organizing as a matter of care. Going beyond existing understandings of human-animal relations, we show how ethico-political dynamics shape multispecies relations in three ways: how we and other species relate to ecologies-in-place (affective relationalities); what we and other species do (vital doings); and, finally, what kinds of worlds we-through our ethical sensibilities-commit to bringing into being (ethical obligations). Using an illustrative example of a rewilding site in England, this article shows how multispecies organizing plays out in a specific ecology-in-place. Our argument has important implications for the conception and contemporary practices of the organizational ethics of life and death.
KW - 512 Business and Management
KW - affect
KW - ethics of care
KW - more-than-human responsibility
KW - regenerative organizations
KW - relational sustainability
KW - rewilding
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105005638607&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1017/beq.2025.8
DO - 10.1017/beq.2025.8
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105005638607
SN - 1052-150X
JO - Business Ethics Quarterly
JF - Business Ethics Quarterly
ER -