A Structural Model for the Antecedents of Sustainable Project Management in Pakistan
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Abstract
Sustainable development is the core agenda item of the 21st century to be addressed
simultaneously by societies, businesses, and academia. Likewise, sustainability research in the
project context is fragmented and still at a nascent stage with less attention directed towards the key
antecedents particularly in developing countries. Using institutional theory, this paper analyzes the
role of normative and mimetic isomorphic pressures as external enablers for integrating sustainability
in project processes. Additionally, it aims to empirically validate a structural model for predictors
of sustainable project management (SPM). Data were collected from 146 large construction firms
in Pakistan which were then analyzed using the partial least square structural equation modeling
(PLS-SEM) technique. The results show that mimetic isomorphic pressures assert more influence than
normativepressuresinpredictingthesustainability performanceofconstructionprojects. Theinferred
implications suggest that large construction firms will tend to improve their sustainable performance
under isomorphic pressure from professional bodies and from those competitors who are early
adopters of sustainable project practices. This paper contributes to the literature by explaining
the role of non-coercive isomorphism as an important enabler of SPM in developing countries.
The model presented will enrich our current understanding of SPM by studying its juxtaposition
with institutional theory and sustainable development research.