Mapping the Link Between ESG Performance and Longevity
Synopsis
Longevity is increasingly recognized as a key societal objective, yet its relationship with corporate and community-level ESG (Environmental, Social, Governance) performance remains conceptually fragmented and empirically underexplored. Current sustainability frameworks often treat health and longevity as secondary social outcomes, rather than integrating them systematically into ESG impact measurement and decision-making. This paper maps the conceptual linkages between ESG performance and longevity by proposing an exploratory analytical framework that connects sustainability practices to long-term health and life expectancy outcomes. We argue that longevity should be understood not merely as a demographic indicator, but as a cumulative result of environmental quality, social cohesion, preventive health behaviors, and governance structures that sustain well-being over time. The framework stresses the need for measurable, comparable indicators that make longevity-related outcomes visible within ESG assessments and reporting. The paper contributes to sustainability impact measurement and offers practical implications for policymakers, municipalities, firms, and investors in aging societies.
Downloads
Pages
Published
Categories
- Economics
- Logistics
- Mathematics
- Entrepreneurship
- Bussiness
- Computer Science and Informatics
- Sociology
- Mechanical Engineering
- Tourism
- Organizational Sciences
- Criminal Justice and Security
- Ecology
- Educational sciences
- Health Sciences
- 2026
- Conference proceedings
- Open Access
- University of Maribor, Faculty of Organizational Sciences
- Slovene language
- English language
- Multilingual






