“Villainy is not a very useful analytical category.”
That observation, drawn from Professor Garima Sharma’s research on sustainability, inequality, and organizational paradoxes, reflects a broader argument about how organizations create both positive and harmful outcomes.
Rather than focusing exclusively on individual blame, Sharma’s work examines why systems filled with well-intentioned people can still produce outcomes that generate inequality, exclusion, or long-term harm.
Sharma’s research suggests that the most important questions in business are often structural rather than personal.
Organizations operate inside systems shaped by institutional pressures, market incentives, measurement frameworks, and information limitations. Those structures influence decision-making in ways that cannot always be reduced to individual intent.
“To me, the more interesting question is actually a structural question,” Sharma explains. “Why do these good-intentioned people in businesses so often produce mixed or even bad outcomes sometimes?”
For Sharma, shifting attention toward systems creates opportunities for deeper analysis and more effective organizational change.
When organizations produce harmful outcomes, Sharma’s research encourages leaders to examine the broader systems shaping behavior.
One factor is institutional pressure. Companies operate within competitive markets, investor expectations, regulatory systems, and financial constraints that can make socially responsible choices difficult to sustain over time.
A business leader may genuinely prioritize sustainability or equity while simultaneously facing pressures tied to quarterly performance, shareholder expectations, or operational survival.
Understanding those pressures does not excuse harmful outcomes. Instead, it helps identify where organizational systems may need redesign.
Sharma’s work also highlights how informational limitations shape organizational behavior.
Leaders rarely have complete visibility into the full consequences of organizational decisions, particularly inside large and complex systems.
Her fieldwork in India’s garment industry, for example, demonstrates how formal compliance systems can overlook deeper social inequalities operating beneath official metrics.
In many organizations, measurement systems prioritize financial outcomes, audit compliance, or short-term indicators while failing to capture relational, social, or structural forms of inequality.
Sharma argues that organizations often manage what they are able to measure. When critical dynamics remain invisible, harmful outcomes can persist even inside organizations attempting to improve.
Despite the limitations of blame-centered explanations, Sharma’s research suggests the villain narrative remains appealing because it creates clarity.
Identifying a villain simplifies complexity into a story with clear responsibility and clear moral categories.
But Sharma’s work suggests that simplicity can limit organizational learning.
When systemic problems are framed only as failures of individual morality, the range of possible solutions often narrows to punishment or replacement rather than institutional redesign.
For Sharma, the challenge is not avoiding accountability. It is recognizing that structural problems often require structural solutions.
Sharma’s research points to several broader lessons for organizations attempting to improve social impact and organizational responsibility:
For Sharma, organizations are more likely to improve when leaders feel able to participate honestly in diagnosing systemic problems rather than defending themselves against simplified narratives.
At the Kogod School of Business at American University, Sharma’s broader research consistently examines tensions that organizations cannot fully eliminate, but must instead learn to navigate thoughtfully.
Her work on sustainability, inequality, and organizational paradoxes reflects a broader effort to move conversations about business ethics beyond simplistic binaries of good versus bad.
Rather than treating business leaders as either heroes or villains, Sharma’s research encourages organizations to examine the structures, incentives, and assumptions that shape decision-making inside complex systems.
For Sharma, better organizational outcomes depend not only on individual intentions, but on building institutions capable of supporting more responsible decisions over time.