Bridging Risk Ethics and Sustainability: A Data-Driven Study of Ethical Leadership Practices in Risky Business Environments

dc.affiliationEstonian Entrepreneurship University of Applied Sciences, Estonia
dc.affiliationArmenian State University of Economics, Armenia
dc.affiliationJesus College, University of Cambridge, UK
dc.affiliationBielsko-Biała University of Applied Sciences
dc.affiliationAgricultural University, UK
dc.contributor.authorProkopenko, Olha
dc.contributor.authorJärvis, Maria
dc.contributor.authorShahnazaryan, Nelly
dc.contributor.authorChechel, Anna
dc.contributor.authorChechel, Anna
dc.contributor.authorSapiński Aleksander
dc.contributor.authorBatsenko Ludmila
dc.date.accessioned2025-08-26T09:36:15Z
dc.date.issued2025
dc.description.abstractThis paper analyzes the increasing demand to recognize the role of ethical leadership in sustainabilityperformance under high-risk and multi-dimensional business conditions. The research aims to examine empirically the connection between ethical leadership behaviors and sustainability performance in five countries (Estonia, Armenia, the United Kingdom, Germany, and Poland) between 2022 and 2024. The countries have been chosen because they have varying risk profiles, institutional maturity, and educational capacities and make an adequate comparison in developed and transitional economies. The timeframe of the study reflects a period of increased vulnerability caused by geopolitical tensions, economic disruptions, and shifting governance structures. The study relies on the secondary statistical data of globally reputable databases, such as environmental performance, the quality of governance, and socio-economic development variables. Through the panel fixed effects regressions, the research finds positive and significant associations between ethical leadership and sustainability, especially when good governance and education systems are in place. This confirms the hypothesis that ethical leadership positively affects sustainability in high-risk environments. Case in point, Germany and the United Kingdom were among the countries with high ethical leadership and low business risk to have the most consistently high sustainability scores, whereas transition countries tended to have more mixed performance. The research results can be of practical use to policymakers, corporate planners, and educators who can enhance the morality of leaders to pursue an avenue to sustainability. Such findings can be used in leadership training as well as in the identification of institutional reform strategies and risk-sensitive policies in transitional economies.
dc.identifier.doihttp://doi.org/10.61093/bel.9(2).211‒ 224.2025
dc.identifier.issn2520-6761
dc.identifier.urihttp://dspace.ansbb.edu.pl/handle/123456789/272
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherBusiness Ethics and Leadership
dc.relation.ispartofseries9; 2
dc.subjectbusiness ethics
dc.subjectcorporate governance
dc.subjecteducation
dc.subjectleadership effectiveness
dc.subjectpolicy reform
dc.subjectrisk management
dc.subjectsocio-economic development
dc.subjectsustainability strategy
dc.titleBridging Risk Ethics and Sustainability: A Data-Driven Study of Ethical Leadership Practices in Risky Business Environments
dc.typeArticle

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