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Research Paper Addresses Walmart Sustainability

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August 15, 2018

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An article co-authored by David Hyatt, research associate professor of supply chain management at the Sam M. Walton College of Business at the University of Arkansas, addresses how Walmart came to be one of the most sustainability-minded companies in the world.

The article entitled “Walmart tried to make sustainability affordable. Here’s what happened” was published at theconversation.com. “The Conversation is a platform for sharing academic research but written for popular audiences,” Hyatt said.

Hyatt and his co-author – Andrew Spicer, an associate professor of international business at the University of South Carolina – spent five years studying Walmart’s sustainability program that they call “an ambitious effort to figure out how to get its budget-conscious customers to buy more sustainable products.”

They trace the origins and history of the effort back to Lee Scott, chief executive officer of Walmart from 2000 to 2009, and examine what prompted the move. The article says “Our findings highlight both the promises and perils of what one Walmart executive optimistically termed the ‘democratization of sustainability.’”

The article also extensively examines the concept of sustainability, at one point asking, “What’s ‘sustainable’ anyway?”

Read the entire article online at theconversation.com

The Conversation article was based on work published in the California Management Review.

Walton College

Walton College of Business

Since its founding at the University of Arkansas in 1926, the Sam M. Walton College of Business has grown to become the state's premier college of business – as well as a nationally competitive business school. Learn more...

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