Artigo Científico

Climate change as Greek tragedy: a dual narrative of inaction and consequence

Resumo: Purpose-This paper aims to explore the climate crisis as a modern Greek tragedy, highlighting the moral and structural failures of financial institutions, governments and corporations. It examines the systemic contradictions of sustainability claims versus inaction and their impact on individuals and communities, with a dual narrative blending academic analysis and literary storytelling.

Design/methodology/approach-The study uses an interdisciplinary approach, combining insights from critical international business studies, environmental economics and ethics. The narrative integrates a three-act tragic structure, interweaving macrolevel institutional analysis with a microlevel fictional storyline of a farming family confronting climate-induced challenges.

Findings-The paper reveals how institutional ambivalence, driven by short-term profit motives and political expediency, perpetuates inaction on climate change. This systemic inertia exacerbates inequalities, undermines sustainability efforts and leaves individuals, like the farmer’s family, vulnerable to ecological and economic collapse. It concludes with a call for collective responsibility and transformative action.

Social implications-By connecting macrolevel inaction with microlevel human suffering, the paper underscores the ethical urgency of addressing climate change through systemic reforms. It invites policymakers, corporations and individuals to confront their complicity and adopt long-term strategies for equitable sustainability.

Originality/value-This work uniquely merges the framework of Greek tragedy with critical social science to offer a novel perspective on climate inaction. It bridges theoretical discourse with emotive storytelling, humanizing the often-abstract consequences of international business practices on climate change. © 2026 The Authors
  • Tipo de documento

    Artigo Científico

  • Tema

    Fossil fuel industry; Public policy, Climate change, Financial system

  • Autor

    Relano, F.; Paulet, E.

  • Data

    2026