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
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 bring 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 bring 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 - rewilding
KW - relational sustainability
U2 - 10.1017/beq.2025.8
DO - 10.1017/beq.2025.8
M3 - Article
SN - 1052-150X
JO - Business Ethics Quarterly
JF - Business Ethics Quarterly
ER -