Perspectives on corporate citizenship
著者
書誌事項
Perspectives on corporate citizenship
Greenleaf, 2001
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注記
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
A number of disparate but interconnected forces such as deregulation and globalization, rapid advances in communications technology and the rise in the power of the consumer and civil society have now combined to bring corporate responsibility to prominence in many corporate boardrooms. In this information age, the ramifications of not addressing best practice in environment, workplace, marketplace and community could range from bad press coverage to complete market exclusion. These are perilous times for the social construct of modern capitalism.In today's society successful companies will increasingly be those that recognize that they have responsibilities to a range of stakeholders that go beyond compliance with the law. If in the past the focus was on enhancing shareholder value, now it is on engaging stakeholders for long-term value creation. This does not mean that shareholders are not important, or that profitability is not vital to business success, but that in order to survive and be profitable a company must engage with a range of stakeholders whose views may vary greatly. If in the past corporate social responsibility was simply seen as profitability plus compliance plus philanthropy, now responsible corporate citizenship means companies being more aware of and understanding the societies in which they operate. This means senior executives and managers being able to deal with a wide range of issues including greater accountability, human rights abuses, sustainability strategies, corporate governance codes, workplace ethics, stakeholder consultation and management.The aim and scope of Perspectives on Corporate Citizenship is to help capture and distil these and other emerging trends in terms of content, context and processes, in one concise volume. With contributions from the *creme de la creme* of leading thinkers from around the world, Perspectives on Corporate Citizenship is essential reading for students, scholars and all serious thinkers on one of the most critical issues of our time.
目次
ForewordProfessor Dr Andre Habisch, Catholic University of Eichstaett and Managing Director, Center for Corporate CitizenshipIntroductionJoerg Andriof, Corporate Citizenship Unit, Warwick Business School, UKPart I: Evolution, context and concepts of corporate citizenship1. Integrity and mindfulness: Foundations of corporate citizenshipSandra Waddock, Boston College, Carroll School of Management, USA2. Corporate citizenship: Evolution and interpretationDuane Windsor, Rice University, USA3. Corporate citizenship: Rethinking business beyond corporate social responsibilityDavid Birch, Corporate Citizenship Research Unit, Deakin University, Australia4. Global corporate citizenship in a dot.com world: The role of organisational identityJames E. Post and Shawn L. Berman, Boston University, USA5. Theorising business citizenshipDonna J. Wood, University of Pittsburgh, USA, and Jeanne M. Logsdon, University of New Mexico, USA6. Business citizenship outside and inside organisations: An emergent synthesis of corporate responsibility and employee citizenshipDiane Swanson and Brian P. Niehoff, Kansas State University, USAPart II: Governance and leadership of corporate citizens7. Corporate citizenship as an ethic of care: Corporate values, codes of ethics and global governanceMichel Dion, Universite de Sherbrooke, Canada8. The moral leader: Essential for successful corporate citizenshipArchie B. Carroll, University of Georgia, USA9. How Australia's top 500 companies are becoming corporate citizensMark Glazebrook, Corporate Citizenship Research Unit, Deakin University, Australia10. When multinational corporations act as governments: The Mobil corporation experienceAlejo Jose G. Sison, Institute for Enterprise and Humanism, University of Navarre, Spain11. The world's business: The United Nations and the globalisation of corporate citizenshipJonathan Cohen, United Nations Association of the USAPart 3: Stakeholder engagement and social accountability12. Partnership alchemy: Engagement, innovation and governanceSimon Zadek, Institute of Social and Ethical AccountAbility, UK13. Patterns of stakeholder partnership buildingJoerg Andriof, Corporate Citizenship Unit, Warwick Business School, UK14. A comparative study of stakeholder engagement approaches in social auditingSimon S. Gao, Napier University Business School, UK, and Jane J. Zhang, Glasgow Caledonian University, UK15. Corporate citizenship: What gets recorded? What gets rewarded?Kimberly S. Davenport, BellSouth Corporation, USA, and Patsy Lewellyn, University of South Carolina Aiken, USA16. Processes in social and ethical accountability: external reporting mechanismsLeigh Holland, De Montfort University, UK, and Jane Gibbon, Newcastle Business School, University of Northumbria, UKBibliography
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