scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

An Economic Industry and Institutional Level of Analysis of Corporate Social Responsibility Communication

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this paper, the authors identify the similarities and differences in corporate social responsibility (CSR) communication at the institutional and economic industry level of analysis and find that at the corporate level, a corporate consensus exists about the scope of CSR and is largely understood as welfare capitalism.
Abstract
This study identifies the similarities and differences in corporate social responsibility (CSR) communication at the institutional and economic industry level of analysis. Findings suggest that at the institutional level of analysis, a corporate consensus exists about the scope of CSR and is largely understood as welfare capitalism. However, at the economic level of analysis, differences across economic industries exist based on value-chain position. Specifically, industries further up the value-chain focus on the safety of their employees, ethical business practices, and environmental stewardship as essential elements of CSR, whereas economic industries closer to customers in the value chain were more likely to focus on philanthropy and education as CSR.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The Market for Virtue: The Potential and Limits of Corporate Social Responsibility

TL;DR: Vogel as mentioned in this paper argues that there is no business case that can be generalized to all firms per se, but there is a political case for broadening what we mean by that much-used term.
Journal ArticleDOI

Maintaining legitimacy of a contested practice: How the minerals industry understands its ‘social licence to operate’

TL;DR: In this article, the authors conducted interviews with 16 managers in the mining industry in Australia to explore how these managers conceptualised social licence in relation to notions such as legitimacy, approval, and consent, how they interpret processes of social license in practice, and how they differentiate it from concepts such as CSR.
Journal ArticleDOI

How Institutions Communicate: Institutional Messages, Institutional Logics, and Organizational Communication

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider the institutionality of messages in terms of their endurance, reach, encumbency, and intentionality, and argue that institutional messages carry institutional logics, patterns of beliefs and rules.
Journal ArticleDOI

Communicating Corporate Social Responsibility on Social Media: Strategies, Stakeholders, and Public Engagement on Corporate Facebook

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore what corporations with good reputations communicate on social media, based on a content analysis of 46 corporate Facebook pages from Fortune's “World’s Most...
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Toward a Theory of Stakeholder Identification and Salience: Defining the Principle of who and What Really Counts

TL;DR: In this paper, a theory of stakeholder identification and saliency based on stakeholders possessing one or more of three relationship attributes (power, legitimacy, and urgency) is proposed, and a typology of stakeholders, propositions concerning their saliency to managers of the firm, and research and management implications.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Stakeholder Theory of the Corporation: Concepts, Evidence, and Implications

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine three aspects of the stakeholder theory and critique and integrate important contributions to the literature related to each, concluding that the three aspects are mutually supportive and that the normative base of the theory-which includes the modern theory of property rights-is fundamental.
Book ChapterDOI

The Social Responsibility of Business Is to Increase Its Profits

TL;DR: When I hear businessmen speak eloquently about the social responsibilities of business in a free-enterprise system, I am reminded of the wonderful line about the Frenchman who discovered at the age of 70 that he had been speaking prose all his life as mentioned in this paper.
Journal Article

Strategy and society: the link between competitive advantage and corporate social responsibility.

TL;DR: A fundamentally new way is proposed to look at the relationship between business and society that does not treat corporate growth and social welfare as a zero-sum game and introduces a framework that individual companies can use to identify the social consequences of their actions.
Journal ArticleDOI

The pyramid of corporate social responsibility: Toward the moral management of organizational stakeholders

TL;DR: For the better part of 30 years now, corporate executives have struggled with the issue of the firm's responsibility to its society, and it became quickly apparent to everyone, however, that this pursuit of financial gain had to take place within the laws of the land.
Related Papers (5)