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The Managerial Sources of Corporate Social Responsibility Christian R. Thauer (Freie Universitat Berlin)

The Managerial Sources of Corporate Social Responsibility By Christian R. Thauer (Freie Universitat Berlin)

The Managerial Sources of Corporate Social Responsibility by Christian R. Thauer (Freie Universitat Berlin)


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Summary

Why and under which conditions do companies voluntarily adopt high social and environmental standards? Christian R. Thauer argues for the importance of internal drivers of corporate social responsibility and suggests a transaction cost economics-based explanation, using examples from firms in the automotive and textile industries in South Africa and China.

The Managerial Sources of Corporate Social Responsibility Summary

The Managerial Sources of Corporate Social Responsibility: The Spread of Global Standards by Christian R. Thauer (Freie Universitat Berlin)

Why and under which conditions do companies voluntarily adopt high social and environmental standards? Christian R. Thauer looks inside the firm to illustrate the internal drivers of the social conduct of business. He argues that corporate social responsibility (CSR) assists decision-makers to resolve managerial dilemmas. Drawing on transaction cost economics, he asks why and which dilemmas bring CSR to the fore. In this context he describes a managerial dilemma as a situation where the execution of management's decisions transforms the mode of cooperation within the organization from a hierarchy to one in which managers become dependent on, and vulnerable to, the behavior of subordinates. Thauer provides empirical illustration of his theory by examining automotive and textile factories in South Africa and China. Thauer demonstrates that CSR is often driven by internal management problems rather than by the external pressures that corporations confront.

The Managerial Sources of Corporate Social Responsibility Reviews

'Christian R. Thauer gives us a fresh take on the motives behind corporate social responsibility. Rather than altruism or shamming campaigns, Thauer develops a novel theoretical argument focusing on the self-interests of the firm. He backs up his claim with detailed case studies of companies across a range of developing economies and industrial sectors. The book offers both analytic and empirical bite.' Abraham Newman, Georgetown University, Washington DC
'This is a valuable contribution to scholarship on corporate social responsibility (CSR), and undoubtedly will spur further research into intra-firm dynamics as explanations for CSR policies and practices.' Susan Sell, George Washington University, Washington DC

About Christian R. Thauer (Freie Universitat Berlin)

Christian R. Thauer is Assistant Professor in International Relations at the Freie Universitat Berlin and Visiting Fellow at the Jackson School of International Studies at the University of Washington. He was awarded the International Studies Association International Political Economy (ISA-IPE) Best Dissertation Prize 201011 for his award-winning thesis.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction; 2. A theory of internal drivers of corporate social responsibility; 3. Corporate social responsibility: an inside-view approach and perspective; 4. Internal driver 1: the human resources dilemma; 5. Internal drivers 2 and 3: the technological specialization and foreign direct investment dilemmas; 6. Internal driver 4: the brand reputation dilemma; 7. Conclusion: internal drivers, corporate social responsibility and the spread of global standards.

Additional information

NPB9781107066533
9781107066533
1107066530
The Managerial Sources of Corporate Social Responsibility: The Spread of Global Standards by Christian R. Thauer (Freie Universitat Berlin)
New
Hardback
Cambridge University Press
2014-10-23
352
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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