Behavioral barriers to sustainable action in project management and how to overcome them

Friedrich K, Wehnert P (2025)


Publication Type: Journal article

Publication year: 2025

Journal

Book Volume: 43

Article Number: 102747

Journal Issue: 6

DOI: 10.1016/j.ijproman.2025.102747

Abstract

Project managers encounter behavioral barriers that hinder the integration of sustainability practices into projects. While prior research has explored enabling factors, these barriers project managers face remain understudied. We address this gap through 24 problem-centered interviews, identifying 13 barriers, including low goal commitment, perception-related challenges, feedback-related issues, and role conflicts. The Rubicon phase model provides a structured basis for our conceptual framework for analyzing these barriers, enabling the validation of known general barriers and the discovery of new role-specific ones. Our findings highlight the role-dependent nature of barriers and strategies to overcome them, such as leading by example, establishing guidelines, providing incentives, and capability development. While providing practical value the study also strengthens the theoretical understanding of sustainability-related decision-making and contributes to the sustainability and project management literature by showing that enablers like guidelines, training or rewards are insufficient without simultaneously addressing individual behavioral barriers in perceptions and beliefs.

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How to cite

APA:

Friedrich, K., & Wehnert, P. (2025). Behavioral barriers to sustainable action in project management and how to overcome them. International Journal of Project Management, 43(6). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijproman.2025.102747

MLA:

Friedrich, Kevin, and Peter Wehnert. "Behavioral barriers to sustainable action in project management and how to overcome them." International Journal of Project Management 43.6 (2025).

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