Reframing Corporate Social Responsibility: Lessons from the Global Financial Crisis

Author:   William Sun ,  Jim Stewart ,  David Pollard ,  William Sun
Publisher:   Emerald Publishing Limited
Volume:   1
ISBN:  

9780857244550


Pages:   321
Publication Date:   13 December 2010
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Reframing Corporate Social Responsibility: Lessons from the Global Financial Crisis


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Full Product Details

Author:   William Sun ,  Jim Stewart ,  David Pollard ,  William Sun
Publisher:   Emerald Publishing Limited
Imprint:   Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Volume:   1
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 3.30cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.599kg
ISBN:  

9780857244550


ISBN 10:   0857244558
Pages:   321
Publication Date:   13 December 2010
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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"""Sharply crafted and refreshingly forthright, this edited collection is easily the most incisive scholarly treatment of the rhetoric and reality of 'Corporate Social Responsibility' (CSR) produced since the depths of the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) in 2007-8. It is also the first in what promises to be (under William Sun's expert editorial guidance) a steady flow of high-quality multi-author volumes addressing front-of-mind issues in corporate responsibility, governance and sustainability from a critical yet constructive perspective. If is incontestable that GFC exposed with brutal clarity the depths of corporate irresponsibility and regulatory ineptitude in western market economies, it is also plausible to argue - as do the 13 chapter contributions in this book - that the crisis also laid bare the underlying contradictions and limitations of pre-crisis approaches to CSR. In 2008, CSR (as then conceptualised and practised) was tested and found to wanting - perhaps even exacerbating the crisis rather than ameliorating it. This fine volume offers intelligent and lateral explains as to why this may have been so, as well as providing informed and thoughtful suggestions as to how CSR discourse and practice might be transformed for the greater good. As the volume's editors assert, the overriding conceptual and policy challenge is to reframe CSR from being an optional extra to an 'embedded' ethical imperative, integral to and inseparable from business discourse and values. Here is a book, then, that is designed both to unsettle and to assure; a book that should surely be mandatory reading for every business executive, every business student, and every business academic. Dr John Shields, Professor of Human Resource Management and Organisational Studies, The University of Sydney Business School"""


Sharply crafted and refreshingly forthright, this edited collection is easily the most incisive scholarly treatment of the rhetoric and reality of 'Corporate Social Responsibility' (CSR) produced since the depths of the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) in 2007-8. It is also the first in what promises to be (under William Sun's expert editorial guidance) a steady flow of high-quality multi-author volumes addressing front-of-mind issues in corporate responsibility, governance and sustainability from a critical yet constructive perspective. If is incontestable that GFC exposed with brutal clarity the depths of corporate irresponsibility and regulatory ineptitude in western market economies, it is also plausible to argue - as do the 13 chapter contributions in this book - that the crisis also laid bare the underlying contradictions and limitations of pre-crisis approaches to CSR. In 2008, CSR (as then conceptualised and practised) was tested and found to wanting - perhaps even exacerbating the crisis rather than ameliorating it. This fine volume offers intelligent and lateral explains as to why this may have been so, as well as providing informed and thoughtful suggestions as to how CSR discourse and practice might be transformed for the greater good. As the volume's editors assert, the overriding conceptual and policy challenge is to reframe CSR from being an optional extra to an 'embedded' ethical imperative, integral to and inseparable from business discourse and values. Here is a book, then, that is designed both to unsettle and to assure; a book that should surely be mandatory reading for every business executive, every business student, and every business academic. Dr John Shields, Professor of Human Resource Management and Organisational Studies, The University of Sydney Business School


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