Corporate Social Responsibility?: Human Rights in the New Global Economy
Editat de Charlotte Walker-Said, John D. Kellyen Limba Engleză Paperback – 3 sep 2015
With this book, Charlotte Walker-Said and John D. Kelly have assembled an essential toolkit to better understand how the notoriously ambiguous concept of corporate social responsibility (CSR) functions in practice within different disciplines and settings. Bringing together cutting-edge scholarship from leading figures in human rights programs around the United States, they vigorously engage some of the major political questions of our age: what is CSR, and how might it render positive political change in the real world?
The book examines the diverse approaches to CSR, with a particular focus on how those approaches are siloed within discrete disciplines such as business, law, the social sciences, and human rights. Bridging these disciplines and addressing and critiquing all the conceptual domains of CSR, the book also explores how CSR silos develop as a function of the competition between different interests. Ultimately, the contributors show that CSR actions across all arenas of power are interdependent, continually in dialogue, and mutually constituted. Organizing a diverse range of viewpoints, this book offers a much-needed synthesis of a crucial element of today’s globalized world and asks how businesses can, through their actions, make it better for everyone.
The book examines the diverse approaches to CSR, with a particular focus on how those approaches are siloed within discrete disciplines such as business, law, the social sciences, and human rights. Bridging these disciplines and addressing and critiquing all the conceptual domains of CSR, the book also explores how CSR silos develop as a function of the competition between different interests. Ultimately, the contributors show that CSR actions across all arenas of power are interdependent, continually in dialogue, and mutually constituted. Organizing a diverse range of viewpoints, this book offers a much-needed synthesis of a crucial element of today’s globalized world and asks how businesses can, through their actions, make it better for everyone.
Preț: 169.16 lei
Preț vechi: 201.67 lei
-16% Nou
Puncte Express: 254
Preț estimativ în valută:
32.39€ • 33.73$ • 26.87£
32.39€ • 33.73$ • 26.87£
Carte indisponibilă temporar
Doresc să fiu notificat când acest titlu va fi disponibil:
Se trimite...
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780226244303
ISBN-10: 022624430X
Pagini: 392
Ilustrații: 3 halftones
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press
ISBN-10: 022624430X
Pagini: 392
Ilustrații: 3 halftones
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press
Notă biografică
Charlotte Walker-Said is a historian of modern Africa and assistant professor of Africana studies at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice at the City University of New York. John D. Kelly is professor of anthropology at the University of Chicago, where he serves on the faculty board of the Human Rights Program. He is the author or coauthor of several books and, most recently, coeditor of Anthropology and Global Counterinsurgency, also published by the University of Chicago Press.
Cuprins
Preface
John D. Kelly
Chapter 1. Introduction: Power, Profit, and Social Trust
Charlotte Walker-Said
PART I. Corporate Social Responsibility as Controlled Negotiation: The Hierarchy of Values
Charlotte Walker- Said
Chapter 2. Two Cheers for CSR
Peter Rosenblum
Chapter 3. Assessing Corporate Social Responsibility in the Tobacco Industry
Peter Benson
Chapter 4. Transparency, Auditability, and the Contradictions of CSR
Anna Zalik
Chapter 5. Virtuous Language in Industry and the Academy
Stuart Kirsch
PART II. Corporate Social Responsibility and the Mandate to Remedy: Between Empowerment and Mitigating Vulnerabilities
Caroline Kaeb
Chapter 6. An Emerging History of CSR: The Economic Trials at Nuremberg (1945– 49) 125
Jonathan A. Bush
Chapter 7. The Impact of the War Crimes Tribunals on Corporate Liability for Atrocity Crimes under US Law
David Scheffer
Chapter 8. Sanction and Socialize: Military Command Responsibility and Corporate Accountability for Atrocities
Scott A. Gilmore
Chapter 9. Law, Morality, and Rational Choice: Incentives for CSR Compliance
Caroline Kaeb
Chapter 10. Multistakeholder Initiative Anatomy: Understanding Institutional Design and Development
Amelia Evans
Chapter 11. The Virtue of Voluntarism: Human Rights, Corporate Responsibility, and UN Global Compact
Ursula Wynhoven
Yousuf Aftab
PART III. Africa as CSR Laboratory: Twenty- First- Century Corporate Strategy and State Building
Charlotte Walker- Said
Chapter 12. CSR and Corporate Engagement with Parties to Armed Conflicts
William Reno
Chapter 13. Corporate and State Sustainability in Africa: The Politics of Stability in the Postrevolutionary Age
Charlotte Walker- Said
Chapter 14. Tender Is the Mine: Law, Shadow Rule, and the Public Gaze in Ghana
Lauren Coyle
Chapter 15. Corporate Social Responsibility and Latecomer Industrialization in Nigeria
Richard Joseph, Kelly Spence, and Abimbola Agboluaje
Final Thoughts and Acknowledgments
John D. Kelly and Charlotte Walker- Said
Bibliography
Index
John D. Kelly
Chapter 1. Introduction: Power, Profit, and Social Trust
Charlotte Walker-Said
PART I. Corporate Social Responsibility as Controlled Negotiation: The Hierarchy of Values
Charlotte Walker- Said
Chapter 2. Two Cheers for CSR
Peter Rosenblum
Chapter 3. Assessing Corporate Social Responsibility in the Tobacco Industry
Peter Benson
Chapter 4. Transparency, Auditability, and the Contradictions of CSR
Anna Zalik
Chapter 5. Virtuous Language in Industry and the Academy
Stuart Kirsch
PART II. Corporate Social Responsibility and the Mandate to Remedy: Between Empowerment and Mitigating Vulnerabilities
Caroline Kaeb
Chapter 6. An Emerging History of CSR: The Economic Trials at Nuremberg (1945– 49) 125
Jonathan A. Bush
Chapter 7. The Impact of the War Crimes Tribunals on Corporate Liability for Atrocity Crimes under US Law
David Scheffer
Chapter 8. Sanction and Socialize: Military Command Responsibility and Corporate Accountability for Atrocities
Scott A. Gilmore
Chapter 9. Law, Morality, and Rational Choice: Incentives for CSR Compliance
Caroline Kaeb
Chapter 10. Multistakeholder Initiative Anatomy: Understanding Institutional Design and Development
Amelia Evans
Chapter 11. The Virtue of Voluntarism: Human Rights, Corporate Responsibility, and UN Global Compact
Ursula Wynhoven
Yousuf Aftab
PART III. Africa as CSR Laboratory: Twenty- First- Century Corporate Strategy and State Building
Charlotte Walker- Said
Chapter 12. CSR and Corporate Engagement with Parties to Armed Conflicts
William Reno
Chapter 13. Corporate and State Sustainability in Africa: The Politics of Stability in the Postrevolutionary Age
Charlotte Walker- Said
Chapter 14. Tender Is the Mine: Law, Shadow Rule, and the Public Gaze in Ghana
Lauren Coyle
Chapter 15. Corporate Social Responsibility and Latecomer Industrialization in Nigeria
Richard Joseph, Kelly Spence, and Abimbola Agboluaje
Final Thoughts and Acknowledgments
John D. Kelly and Charlotte Walker- Said
Bibliography
Index
Recenzii
"Highlights the broad range of activities that fall within CSR and usefully documents the impact of CSR on the broader human rights movement and its incursions into areas such as criminal and humanitarian law that are underexplored."
"This interdisciplinary collection contains an interesting array of different outlooks."
"Corporate Social Responsibility? focuses on the corporation’s growing role in global governance, and specifically on how its mandates for economic growth do and should interface with progressive human rights agendas.This volume intervenes in a broad literature that more often frames neoliberalism 'as a contest between marketeconomies and nonmarket values' (p. 8). . . . These essays instead complicate understandings of ‘corporate responsibility’ and ‘corporate citizenship’ to dismantle the presumed market/society duality. Rather than consider neoliberalism as abstract economic policy, the authors take a valuable on-the-ground approach that includes case studies of the apparel, mining, oil, and tobacco industries and their operations in diverse locales."