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Corporate Social Responsibility in Developing Countries as an Emerging Field of Study

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TLDR
In this article, the authors present a multilevel review of the literature on CSR in developing countries and highlight the key differentiators and nuanced CSR-related considerations that qualify it as a distinctive field of study.
Abstract
Given the rising interest in corporate social responsibility (CSR) globally, its local expressions are as varied as they are increasingly visible in both developed and developing countries. This paper presents a multilevel review of the literature on CSR in developing countries and highlights the key differentiators and nuanced CSR-related considerations that qualify it as a distinctive field of study. This review entails a content analysis of 452 articles spanning two-and-a-half decades (1990–2015). Based on this comprehensive review, the authors identify the key differentiating attributes of the literature on CSR in developing countries in relation to depictions of how CSR is conceived or ‘CSR Thinking’ and depictions of how CSR is practiced and implemented or ‘CSR Doing’. The authors synthesize from there five key themes that capture the main aspects of variation in this literature, namely: (1) complex institutional antecedents within the national business system (NBS); (2) complex macro-level antecedents outside the NBS; (3) the salience of multiple actors involved in formal and informal governance; (4) hybridized and other nuanced forms of CSR expressions; and (5) varied scope of developmental and detrimental CSR consequences. The paper concludes by accentuating how the nuanced forms of CSR in the developing world are invariably contextualized and locally shaped by multi-level factors and actors embedded within wider formal and informal governance systems.

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Determinants of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) Disclosure in Developed and Developing Countries: A Literature Review

TL;DR: In this article, a survey and content analysis of 76 empirical research articles was conducted to understand the factors driving corporate social responsibility disclosure in both developed and developing countries. And they found that firm characteristics such as company size, industry sector, profitability, and corporate governance mechanisms predominantly appear to drive the CSR reporting agenda.
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Sensitive industries produce better ESG performance: Evidence from emerging markets

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How global is international CSR research? Insights and recommendations from a systematic review

TL;DR: The authors systematically reviewed 494 articles in 31 journals over a 31-year period and found that international CSR research is far from being global and still emerging in ‘mainstream’ management/business.
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Corporate Social Responsibility and Ethical Leadership: Investigating Their Interactive Effect on Employees’ Socially Responsible Behaviors

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the interlinkage between corporate social responsibility and ethical leadership in inducing employees' socially responsible behaviors (SRBs) by developing and testing an integrated moderated mediation framework in which employees' perception of ethical leadership moderates the mediating mechanism between their perceptions of CSR and organizational identification.
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The effects of corporate social responsibility on corporate reputation and firm financial performance: Moderating role of responsible leadership

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) on corporate reputation and financial performance of Pakistani firms with a moderating role of responsible leadership were examined, and the results reveal that socially responsible initiatives for disparate stakeholders significantly and positively influence corporate reputation, and that CSR-reputation and CSR performance direct relationships were negatively moderated by responsible leadership.
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