Corporate Social Responsibility and Water Consumption and Management Issue: Responsiveness of Hoteliers in Aqaba Special Economic Zone, Jordan

This study attempts to address the issue of water consumption and management from the perspective of tourism business' responsibility. Guided by the theories of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR), the study looks at the responsiveness of hoteliers in Aqaba Economic Zone. Specific objectives...

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Main Author: Al Mahasneh, Mohammad Fadel Salman
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://etd.uum.edu.my/2518/1/Mohammad_Fadel_Salman_Al_Mahasneh.pdf
http://etd.uum.edu.my/2518/2/1.Mohammad_Fadel_Salman_Al_Mahasneh.pdf
http://etd.uum.edu.my/2518/
http://lintas.uum.edu.my:8080/elmu/index.jsp?module=webopac-l&action=fullDisplayRetriever.jsp&szMaterialNo=0000761711
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id my.uum.etd.2518
record_format eprints
institution Universiti Utara Malaysia
building UUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Utara Malaysia
content_source UUM Electronic Theses
url_provider http://etd.uum.edu.my/
language English
English
topic HD28-70 Management. Industrial Management
spellingShingle HD28-70 Management. Industrial Management
Al Mahasneh, Mohammad Fadel Salman
Corporate Social Responsibility and Water Consumption and Management Issue: Responsiveness of Hoteliers in Aqaba Special Economic Zone, Jordan
description This study attempts to address the issue of water consumption and management from the perspective of tourism business' responsibility. Guided by the theories of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR), the study looks at the responsiveness of hoteliers in Aqaba Economic Zone. Specific objectives include: 1) to determine the current status of tourism and hospitality industry in ASEZA, and the current state of water production and consumption in ASEZA using secondary information; and 2) to understand hoteliers' responsiveness though their a) awareness and attitudes towards water consumption and management issues related to the hospitality industry; b)existing practices (internal drives and initiatives) in water management and consumption and c) perspectives on external drivers for water consumption and management using empirical data. To get the information, hoteliers of all 35 hotels of various ratings were approached and interviewed using an open ended survey instrument. The analysis revealed that as tourism become more and more important in Jordan, so does the growth of hotel and apartments to cater for tourists' accommodation. This strengthens the assumption that there is an increasing need for more water resources and water treatment capabilities to cater for the growth. However, analysis also revealed that published data on water needs by tourism in Jordan does not show this because it excludes water usage by other tourism attributes such as toilets in places of attractions, restaurants and rest houses. Instead, those attributes are considered as commercial and residential consumers of water due to technical reasons. Thus, water demand and usage of tourism appears relatively small when in fact, it should be much more significant. Nonetheless, in light of the positive tourism growth, and the low water availability in Jordan. the country should be more realistic in its water usage estimation and prepare an economic strategy to encounter the water shortage in the future, one of which is through CSR. The second part of the study's analysis showed that there was responsiveness toward the rationing of water consumption by hotels managers, since they recognize the issue to be critical and consider water rationing to be as a beneficial part of hotel management. The context in which these hoteliers operate (the dry climate which necessitate control of water use, the establishment of Aqaba Water Company to guide and push them in the right direction. the obvious benefits of water rationing on their operation costs and the general awareness about the links and relationships between their business and the water situation in Jordan) play a big role is molding this responsiveness. The theoretical implications of business responsiveness to water consumption and management issues are that attributes such as 1) business' survival instinct; 2) internal policy and employee support; 3) moral support from governmental and nongovernmental agencies; and 4) business profile are instrumental in enhancing positive responsiveness towards environmental issue, at least in the context of ASEZA. Other theoretical drivers that are relevant (in various degrees) in the context of water consumption and management issue in ASEZA hotel industry are top management commitment, cost minimization, and customer demand (as hotels with foreign clients are more aware of the issue). The issue of "mimicry" of a model agency's norms and actions as suggested by Gladwin's Institutional Model can be applied to the study context because hoteliers emulate Aqaba Water Companies norms and values when dealing with water management issue. Managerial implications of this study are also discussed.
format Thesis
author Al Mahasneh, Mohammad Fadel Salman
author_facet Al Mahasneh, Mohammad Fadel Salman
author_sort Al Mahasneh, Mohammad Fadel Salman
title Corporate Social Responsibility and Water Consumption and Management Issue: Responsiveness of Hoteliers in Aqaba Special Economic Zone, Jordan
title_short Corporate Social Responsibility and Water Consumption and Management Issue: Responsiveness of Hoteliers in Aqaba Special Economic Zone, Jordan
title_full Corporate Social Responsibility and Water Consumption and Management Issue: Responsiveness of Hoteliers in Aqaba Special Economic Zone, Jordan
title_fullStr Corporate Social Responsibility and Water Consumption and Management Issue: Responsiveness of Hoteliers in Aqaba Special Economic Zone, Jordan
title_full_unstemmed Corporate Social Responsibility and Water Consumption and Management Issue: Responsiveness of Hoteliers in Aqaba Special Economic Zone, Jordan
title_sort corporate social responsibility and water consumption and management issue: responsiveness of hoteliers in aqaba special economic zone, jordan
publishDate 2010
url http://etd.uum.edu.my/2518/1/Mohammad_Fadel_Salman_Al_Mahasneh.pdf
http://etd.uum.edu.my/2518/2/1.Mohammad_Fadel_Salman_Al_Mahasneh.pdf
http://etd.uum.edu.my/2518/
http://lintas.uum.edu.my:8080/elmu/index.jsp?module=webopac-l&action=fullDisplayRetriever.jsp&szMaterialNo=0000761711
_version_ 1644276714804609024
spelling my.uum.etd.25182013-07-24T12:16:23Z http://etd.uum.edu.my/2518/ Corporate Social Responsibility and Water Consumption and Management Issue: Responsiveness of Hoteliers in Aqaba Special Economic Zone, Jordan Al Mahasneh, Mohammad Fadel Salman HD28-70 Management. Industrial Management This study attempts to address the issue of water consumption and management from the perspective of tourism business' responsibility. Guided by the theories of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR), the study looks at the responsiveness of hoteliers in Aqaba Economic Zone. Specific objectives include: 1) to determine the current status of tourism and hospitality industry in ASEZA, and the current state of water production and consumption in ASEZA using secondary information; and 2) to understand hoteliers' responsiveness though their a) awareness and attitudes towards water consumption and management issues related to the hospitality industry; b)existing practices (internal drives and initiatives) in water management and consumption and c) perspectives on external drivers for water consumption and management using empirical data. To get the information, hoteliers of all 35 hotels of various ratings were approached and interviewed using an open ended survey instrument. The analysis revealed that as tourism become more and more important in Jordan, so does the growth of hotel and apartments to cater for tourists' accommodation. This strengthens the assumption that there is an increasing need for more water resources and water treatment capabilities to cater for the growth. However, analysis also revealed that published data on water needs by tourism in Jordan does not show this because it excludes water usage by other tourism attributes such as toilets in places of attractions, restaurants and rest houses. Instead, those attributes are considered as commercial and residential consumers of water due to technical reasons. Thus, water demand and usage of tourism appears relatively small when in fact, it should be much more significant. Nonetheless, in light of the positive tourism growth, and the low water availability in Jordan. the country should be more realistic in its water usage estimation and prepare an economic strategy to encounter the water shortage in the future, one of which is through CSR. The second part of the study's analysis showed that there was responsiveness toward the rationing of water consumption by hotels managers, since they recognize the issue to be critical and consider water rationing to be as a beneficial part of hotel management. The context in which these hoteliers operate (the dry climate which necessitate control of water use, the establishment of Aqaba Water Company to guide and push them in the right direction. the obvious benefits of water rationing on their operation costs and the general awareness about the links and relationships between their business and the water situation in Jordan) play a big role is molding this responsiveness. The theoretical implications of business responsiveness to water consumption and management issues are that attributes such as 1) business' survival instinct; 2) internal policy and employee support; 3) moral support from governmental and nongovernmental agencies; and 4) business profile are instrumental in enhancing positive responsiveness towards environmental issue, at least in the context of ASEZA. Other theoretical drivers that are relevant (in various degrees) in the context of water consumption and management issue in ASEZA hotel industry are top management commitment, cost minimization, and customer demand (as hotels with foreign clients are more aware of the issue). The issue of "mimicry" of a model agency's norms and actions as suggested by Gladwin's Institutional Model can be applied to the study context because hoteliers emulate Aqaba Water Companies norms and values when dealing with water management issue. Managerial implications of this study are also discussed. 2010 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en http://etd.uum.edu.my/2518/1/Mohammad_Fadel_Salman_Al_Mahasneh.pdf application/pdf en http://etd.uum.edu.my/2518/2/1.Mohammad_Fadel_Salman_Al_Mahasneh.pdf Al Mahasneh, Mohammad Fadel Salman (2010) Corporate Social Responsibility and Water Consumption and Management Issue: Responsiveness of Hoteliers in Aqaba Special Economic Zone, Jordan. Masters thesis, Universiti Utara Malaysia. http://lintas.uum.edu.my:8080/elmu/index.jsp?module=webopac-l&action=fullDisplayRetriever.jsp&szMaterialNo=0000761711
score 13.145126