Sustainability intrapreneurship: The role of employees in early-stage sustainability transitions of large technical systems
Doktorsavhandling, 2026
Still, recent empirical findings show that path-breaking innovation also emerges within large technical systems, and there has been a growing scholarly interest in understanding this phenomenon. However, this research has remained at the organisational level, overlooking the internal complexity of organisations, including the individuals within them. As a result, there is a gap where an intrapreneurial perspective could provide new insights.
Relying on three separate studies containing several empirical cases, primarily from the Swedish energy and traffic safety sectors, the thesis applies a qualitative approach to examine the locus of agency in path-breaking innovations in large technical systems. A role-based typology of sustainability intrapreneurs is proposed, distinguishing between the agenda setter, the demonstrator and the networking educator, each role contributing differently to the development and scaling of path-breaking innovation. Findings show that some incumbent employees act as sustainability intrapreneurs and play these roles, at their own discretion, to mobilise resources, challenge dominant technologies and visualise alternative futures for colleagues and others.
Theoretically, the thesis integrates insights from the entrepreneurship literature into the sustainability transitions literature, allowing the development of a novel analytical lens focusing on incumbent employees. This incumbent firm-internal bottom-up agency has previously not been represented in the conceptualisation of incumbents in sustainability transitions. Furthermore, the proposed concept of sustainability intrapreneurship is a new form of intrapreneurship, focusing explicitly on improving the socio-technical system rather than merely the employer’s organisational benefits. By capturing sustainability intrapreneurship as both a theoretical concept and an empirical phenomenon, this thesis contributes to understanding how agency for early-stage sustainability transitions emerges, evolves and materialises within large technical systems.
sustainability intrapreneurship
large technical systems
sustainability transitions
employees
incumbents
workplace behaviour
Författare
Niklas Fernqvist
Chalmers tekniska högskola
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This thesis explores the role of employees in established organisations in developing sustainability initiatives in the Swedish energy and road safety sectors. While previous research has mainly examined organisations as a whole, this study focuses on the individuals who initiate and support change from within the established organisations. Based on three qualitative case studies, a role-based typology of sustainability intrapreneurs is proposed, distinguishing between the agenda setter, the demonstrator and the networking educator. Each role contributes differently to the development and scaling of sustainability initiatives.
Studying the role of intrapreneurship is a new perspective in the sustainability transitions literature. Sustainability intrapreneurship is also a new form of intrapreneurship, focusing explicitly on improving a sector rather than merely the employer’s organisational benefits. By capturing sustainability intrapreneurship as both a theoretical concept and an empirical phenomenon, this thesis contributes to understanding how sustainability initiatives emerge in the early stages of sustainability transitions in large technical systems.
Ämneskategorier (SSIF 2025)
Företagsekonomi
Övrig annan samhällsvetenskap
DOI
10.63959/chalmers.dt/5909
ISBN
978-91-8103-452-3
Doktorsavhandlingar vid Chalmers tekniska högskola. Ny serie: 5909
Utgivare
Chalmers
Vasa 6, Vera Sandbergs Allé 8, Chalmers.
Opponent: Associate Professor Paul Upham, University of Groningen Groningen, the Netherlands.