Pressure, state and response: configurational analysis of organizational resilience in tourism businesses following the COVID-19 pandemic crisis

被引:0
|
作者
Ruiyi Zhao
Ling Li
机构
[1] Xinjiang University,School of Tourism
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Organizational resilience is key for tourism companies in coping with crises; however, little is known about how tourism companies can become more resilient. Furthermore, much of the empirical evidence in the extant literature comes from developed countries. The study identifies key factors affecting organizational resilience based on a “resource–capacity-relationship” theoretical framework, incorporating the number of COVID-19 cases as an external factor in the stress-state-response (PSR) model, with the epidemic as pressure, corporate governance, and redundant resources as the enterprise state, and CSR performance as the response. The fsQCA method was used to analyse the interaction and joint effects among multisource influencing factors such as pressure, state and response. Based on an empirical analysis of 35 listed tourism companies in China from 2010 to 2020, the research found the following: (1) Four groupings of high organizational resilience: redundant resource deficit under epidemic pressure with high pay incentive compensation, low financial risk, and CSR driven under low epidemic pressure, resource deployment and CSR driven under low financial risk and CSR driven under low financial risk. Of these, CSR at the response level as a core condition is key to developing high organizational resilience. (2) Corporate governance capabilities play a high role in fostering organizational resilience under epidemic pressure and can compensate for organizational deficiencies in resources and relationships. (3) Under specific objective endowment conditions, unabsorbed redundant resources and absorbed redundant resources can substitute to some extent for deficiencies in capabilities and relationships. (4) The low organizational resilience configurations suggest that potentially redundant resources may be the key to low organizational resilience. CSR is not the ‘golden key’ to organizational resilience but is influenced by redundant resources. Furthermore, the key variables affecting organizational resilience were significant during the studied period. The research provides a theoretical reference and practical guidance for the sustainable development of tourism enterprises in the context of major public health crises.
引用
下载
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Start-ups' resilience to the crisis caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. The case of tourism industry
    Olszewski, Marcin
    PRACE KOMISJI GEOGRAFII PRZEMYSLU POLSKIEGO TOWARZYSTWA GEOGRAFICZNEGO-STUDIES OF THE INDUSTRIAL GEOGRAPHY COMMISSION OF THE POLISH GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY, 2022, 36 (02): : 190 - 202
  • [22] The impact of Covid-19 pandemic on small businesses in tourism and hospitality industry in Malaysia
    Abhari, Sara
    Jalali, Alireza
    Jaafar, Mastura
    Tajaddini, Reza
    JOURNAL OF RESEARCH IN MARKETING AND ENTREPRENEURSHIP, 2022, 24 (01) : 75 - 91
  • [23] Internationalization and Organizational Resilience to COVID-19 Crisis: The Moderating Effect of Digitalization
    Wang, Yueqi
    Chen, Shouming
    Hu, Yuanyuan
    SAGE OPEN, 2024, 14 (01):
  • [24] Were Culture and Heritage Important for the Resilience of Tourism in the COVID-19 Pandemic?
    Jurlin, Kresimir
    JOURNAL OF RISK AND FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT, 2022, 15 (05)
  • [25] Organizational resilience: leadership, operational and individual responses to the COVID-19 pandemic
    Kim, Jungsik
    Lee, Hun Whee
    Chung, Goo Hyeok
    JOURNAL OF ORGANIZATIONAL CHANGE MANAGEMENT, 2024, 37 (01) : 92 - 115
  • [26] Organizational Resilience to Supply Chain Risks During the COVID-19 Pandemic
    Wulandhari, Nur Baiti Ingga
    Budhwar, Pawan
    Mishra, Nishikant
    Akbar, Saeed
    Quynh Do
    Milligan, Gavin
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT, 2023, 34 (03) : 1282 - 1315
  • [27] Beyond the COVID-19 pandemic: what builds organizational resilience capacity?
    Matysek-Jedrych, Anna
    Mroczek-Dabrowska, Katarzyna
    Kania, Aleksandra
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EMERGING MARKETS, 2022,
  • [28] The state and tourism in Brazil: analysis of public policies in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic
    da Cunha Souza, Mariana Cristina
    REVISTA BRASILEIRA DE PESQUISA EM TURISMO, 2021, 15 (01)
  • [29] COVID-19 economic policy response, resilience and tourism recovery
    Okafor, Luke
    Khalid, Usman
    Gopalan, Sasidaran
    ANNALS OF TOURISM RESEARCH EMPIRICAL INSIGHTS, 2022, 3 (02):
  • [30] Resilience: Directions for an Uncertain Future Following the COVID-19 Pandemic
    Galaitsi, Stephanie
    Kurth, Margaret
    Linkov, Igor
    GEOHEALTH, 2021, 5 (11):