dc.description.abstract | Nowadays, with the rapid rise in consumers' sustainability awareness, more and more
hotels are considering greening their organization by applying ecological human
capacity management. Despite the literature of Ecological HRM has been expanded,
little exposure was given to Green HRM practices and its contribution to the green
capacity of employees, employee job results, so far, especially in the hospitality sector.
This thesis therefore examines a new philosophical paradigm to bridge this research
gap, which discusses the direct and indirect impact of Green HRM activities (training,
reward, and organizational culture) on the environmental potential of employees and
job efficiency of employees. A quantitative analysis containing approximately 360
respondents is conducted by a survey. The data analysis process was done by of partial
least squares (PLS) methodology. In depth, the findings suggest that: (1) two out of
three Green HRM activities (training, culture) are valuable instruments to stimulate the
ecological potential of employees (2) Green understanding, green skills of employees
associated with training programs and sustainable culture have a strong influence on
the performance of employees (3) Incentives for green performance are an unimportant
factor in fostering employee ecological ability and their performance at work. | en_US |