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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Othmar M. Lehner (ACRN Oxford Research Centre, UK and University of Applied Sciences Upper Austria)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 1.302kg ISBN: 9781138343771ISBN 10: 1138343773 Pages: 732 Publication Date: 14 August 2018 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly , Undergraduate Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() 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. Table of Contents"PART I The landscape of Social and Sustainable Finance and Investments I.1 Introducing Social and Sustainable Finance 1 The landscape and scale of Social and Sustainable Finance Linne Marie Lauesen 2 Sustainable finance: building a more general theory of finance Scott Fullwiler 3 The architecture of social finance Gadaf Rexhepi 4 The emergence and institutionalization of the field of social investment in the United Kingdom Belinda Bell and Helen Haugh 5 Academic research into social investment and Impact Investing: the status quo and future research Jess Daggers and Alex Nicholls I.2 Introducing Impact Investing 6 Impact Investing Olaf Weber 7 Social Impact Investing: a model and research agenda Alessandro Rizzello, Maria Cristina Migliazza, Rosella Carè, and Annarita Trotta 8 Impact Investing: funding social innovation Rebecca Tekula and Archana Shah I.3 Special Instruments 9 Crowdfunding social ventures: a model and research agenda Othmar M. Lehner 10 Social Impact Bonds: exploring and understanding an emerging funding approach Jim Clifford and Tobias Jung 11 Lending to social ventures: existing demand for finance and the potential roles of social investment Fergus Lyon PART II Challenges, Suggestions, Critiques, and Debates II.1 Social Responsibility in Finance: ideology, risk and new models 12 Social responsibility in Islamic Finance Ainulashikin Marzuki and Andrew C. Worthington 13 Seeing ourselves as others see us: incorporating reflexivity in Corporate Social Responsibility Christopher Mason and John Simmons 14 Socially Responsible Investment as emergent risk prevention and means to imbue trust in the post-2008/2009 World Financial Crisis economy Julia M. Puaschunder 15 Socially Responsible Investments and Islamic investments: is there a difference? Saeed Binmahfouz 16 Social investment and fiduciary responsibilities Tommi Lehtonen 17 Corporate Social Responsibility and financial performance in Italian co-operative banks Eleonora Broccardo, Ericka Costa, and Maria Mazzuca 18 Integral sustainability or how evolutionary forces are driving investors’ trust and the integration of people, planet, and profit Mariana Bozesan II.2 Critical Perspectives on Markets, Institutions, and Ideology 19 Studying crowdfunding through extreme cases: cursory reflections on the social value creation process of a potato salad project Pascal Dey and Laurent Marti 20 Institutional analysis of Venture Philanthropy Tamaki Onishi 21 The convergence paradox of Islamic Finance: a sociological reinterpretation, with insights for proponents of social finance Aaron Z. Pitluck II.3 Hybridity, Business Models, and Measurement 22 Joint social-financial value creation in social enterprise and social finance and its implications for measurement creation and measurement of profit and impact in social financing Sean Geobey 23 Organizational hybridity in social finance: a comparative analysis Gunnar Glänzel and Björn Schmitz 24 Measuring and comparing social value creation: advantages and disadvantages of a new comparability method, IRIS, GIIRS, and SROI Arne Kroeger and Christiana Weber 25 Sustainable institutional investment models and the human capital analytics approach: a great gap to be filled Carol Royal and G. Sampath S. Windsor 26 Opening the market for Impact Investments: the need for adapted portfolio tools Lisa Brandstetter and Othmar M. Lehner PART III Markets and Institutions III.1 Social and Sustainable Banking 27 Social banks’ mission and finance Olaf Weber 28 Growing social banking through (business) associations Daniel Tischer and Sven Remer 29 Common good disclosure: a framework for analysis Clelia Fiondella, Marco Maffei, Rosanna Spanò, and Claudia Zagaria 30 The quality of bank capital in cooperative banks: lessons from history and the current financial crisis Andrea Bonoldi, Eleonora Broccardo, Luca Erzegovesi, and Andrea Leonardi 31 The recent development and performance of ethical investments Philippe Gillet and Julie Salaber-Ayton 32 The evolution of regulations in banking: a cycle-based approach Mehmet Hasan Eken, Suleyman Kale, and Hüseyin Selimler 33 Evolving roles of regulators in the implementation of environmental and social governance in the financial institutions of emerging markets Adeboye Oyegunle III.2 Trading the Environment 34 Trading under uncertainty: an investigation of the Australia emissions market Deborah Cotton and Marija Buzevska 35 Credit risk and ecosystem services: a review of small-scale emission-certified agroforestry Emmanuel Olatunbosun Benjamin and Gertrud Buchenrieder 36 Evolution of the EU emissions trading system: a new emphasis on distributional and scaling-up dimensions Noriko Fujiwara 37 Climate change mitigation: are carbon markets the ""silver bullet"" solution? Scott J. Niblock and Jennifer L. Harrison III.3 Country Specifics and Cases 38 The landscape of Social and Sustainable Finance in Visegrad (V4) countries Daniela Majerčáková 39 Government-sponsored Venture Philanthropy and social entrepreneurship in China: an exploratory study Qihai Cai 40 The role of Social Investors in developing and emerging economies Lisa M. Hanley, Aline Margaux Laucke, and Tim Weiss 41 Building the Impact Investing market: drivers of demand and the ecosystem conditioning supply Maximilian Martin 42 Formative dynamics in the UK social investment market, 2000–2015: an ""organization rich"" agenda on how markets form Guillermo Casasnovas and Marc J. Ventresca 43 Regional Impact Investing for institutional investors: the Bay Area Impact Investing Initiative Lauryn Agnew"Reviews`The recent decade saw a dramatic rise in the popularity of terms `socially responsible' or `sustainable' and their use in many areas including finance. The terms have been widely utilized by businesses, politicians and researchers alike.ã The dramatic diversity in the contexts where these terms were applied blurred the understanding of what exactly meant by `sustainable' finance.ã This book is a welcome attempt to put various aspects of sustainability and social responsibility together. It provides an impressively comprehensive taxonomy of thoughts, methods, approaches and ideas in the field. It is an excellent reference not just for researchers in the area but anyone who is open to alternative ideas to traditional finance theories and approaches.' - Dr Alexandr Akimov, Senior Lecturer in Banking and Finance, Griffith Business School, Griffith University, Australia ã `The recent decade saw a dramatic rise in the popularity of terms `socially responsible' or `sustainable' and their use in many areas including finance. The terms have been widely utilized by businesses, politicians and researchers alike. The dramatic diversity in the contexts where these terms were applied blurred the understanding of what exactly meant by `sustainable' finance. This book is a welcome attempt to put various aspects of sustainability and social responsibility together. It provides an impressively comprehensive taxonomy of thoughts, methods, approaches and ideas in the field. It is an excellent reference not just for researchers in the area but anyone who is open to alternative ideas to traditional finance theories and approaches.' - Dr Alexandr Akimov, Senior Lecturer in Banking and Finance, Griffith Business School, Griffith University, Australia 'The recent decade saw a dramatic rise in the popularity of terms 'socially responsible' or 'sustainable' and their use in many areas including finance. The terms have been widely utilized by businesses, politicians and researchers alike. The dramatic diversity in the contexts where these terms were applied blurred the understanding of what exactly meant by 'sustainable' finance. This book is a welcome attempt to put various aspects of sustainability and social responsibility together. It provides an impressively comprehensive taxonomy of thoughts, methods, approaches and ideas in the field. It is an excellent reference not just for researchers in the area but anyone who is open to alternative ideas to traditional finance theories and approaches.' - Dr Alexandr Akimov, Senior Lecturer in Banking and Finance, Griffith Business School, Griffith University, Australia Author InformationOthmar M. Lehner is a full professor of Finance and a leading researcher in the field of social finance and impact investment. With a professional background as a bank manager, he now dedicates his academic career to the advancement of the field through research publications, advisory services, conferences, and lecturing in MBA and doctoral programmes. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |