Junghoon Park, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor of Management, College of Business Administration Loyola Marymount University

  • Los Angeles CA

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Biography

You can contact Junghoon Park at Junghoon.Park@lmu.edu.

Junghoon Park is an assistant professor of management in the College of Business Administration at Loyola Marymount University. Junghoon earned his Ph.D. from The Graduate Center and Baruch College, City University of New York. Junghoon’s research expertise focuses on global sustainability strategy, inspired by a strong interest in exploring how firms can design and implement strategies to tackle pressing sustainability issues, such as climate change and public health deficiencies.

Junghoon studies the reciprocal relationship between strategy and sustainability in two main areas: (i) how firms design and implement strategies to advance sustainability and (ii) how sustainability issues affect firm strategies. He also extends his research to examine how firms can contribute to tackling public health crises, a subject that holds vital relevance in today’s sustainability discourse. With his commitment to bridging the gap between academia and real-world application, Junghoon aims to foster a better understanding of how firms can play a pivotal role in addressing global sustainability challenges.

Education

City University of New York, The Graduate Center & Baruch College

Ph.D.

Business

2023

Kyung Hee University

M.S.

International Business

2016

Kyung Hee University

B.A.

International Business and Trade

2014

Social

Areas of Expertise

Business Sustainability
Strategic Management
International Business
Climate Change
Public Health

Media Appearances

Panelists explore responses to climate attitudes

LMU Newsroom  online

2025-03-24

Featured panelists comment on the psychological and societal effects of climate change and the importance of shared climate education.

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Global innovation and university leadership for ESG: Opportunities and challenges

ETNews  online

2024-06-28

Mokpo National University's Institute of Business Strategy successfully hosted a seminar on “Global innovation and university leadership for ESG: Opportunities and challenges."

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How scholars can help businesses be good citizens

City University of New York Graduate Center  

2023-06-08

Student commencement speaker

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Articles

Commercial determinants of health revisited: Integrating business scholarship for greater public health impact

Globalization and Health

Park, J., & Husted, B. W.

2026-01-30

In her influential 2020 review in Globalization and Health, Mialon synthesizes the commercial determinants of health (CDOH) literature and underscores how commercial actors are connected to public health through the institutional environments in which they operate. Much of this research conceptualizes firms as institutionally embedded but relatively homogeneous actors, emphasizing external practices such as the production and promotion of harmful commodities, lobbying, and corporate social responsibility initiatives. While recent CDOH scholarship has begun to recognize the importance of organizational-level factors, few studies analyze the internal processes through which corporate conduct with public health consequences emerges. We argue that integrating insights from management scholarship can enrich CDOH research by opening the “black box” of the firm and clarifying how such conduct arises from interactions among institutional contexts, organizational arrangements, and individual-level dynamics. Drawing on management research, we conceptualize firms as multilevel systems in which institutional conditions inform conduct through organizational governance, resources, and practices, as well as through individual values, cognitions, sensemaking, and interaction among organizational members and stakeholders. These analytically distinct yet dynamically interconnected levels give rise to patterned forms of corporate conduct that affect public health. By foregrounding these multilevel connections, this paper advances a management-informed framework for CDOH research that moves beyond documenting harmful practices toward explaining how firms contribute to public health outcomes and identifying leverage points for intervention.

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Health is everyone’s business: Integrating business and public health for lasting impact

Business & Society

Park, J., Brown, J. A., & Husted, B. W.

2025-01-28

This Special Issue explores the vital connection between business and public health, highlighting their interdependence in addressing today’s global challenges. First, we demonstrate how firms are both contributors to and recipients of public health outcomes. Second, we examine the complexities business faces in defining its public health responsibilities, particularly when navigating diverse and often ambiguous stakeholders, such as communities. Third, we emphasize the importance of interdisciplinary research in addressing the multifaceted challenges at the intersection of business and public health, calling for a holistic approach that integrates insights from public health, medical research, management, and policy.

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(Book Chapter) The evolution of sustainability concerns over business activities: From local to cross-national to global

The research handbook on international corporate social responsibility, Edward Elgar Publishing

Park, J., Cuervo-Cazurra, A., & Montiel, I.

2023-11-10

Although sustainability has recently become a crucial topic of discussion among business practitioners and scholars, the much longer history of sustainability addressing how companies operate is little known. In this book chapter, we analyze the historical evolution of attitudes toward sustainability concerns over business activities, i.e., societal worries about the negative externalities of business activities on social and environmental issues. We propose that sustainability concerns in business have a deep historical foundation that can be traced back to the 18th century. Over time, these concerns have expanded in the scale at which they operate, moving from the local (1700s-1960s) to the cross-national (1970s-1990s) to the global (2000s-2020s). We illustrate this evolution by showcasing the development of two sustainability concerns in business activities: poor working conditions and industrial pollution.

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