Index

Corporate Social Responsibility

ISBN: 978-1-78754-260-0, eISBN: 978-1-78754-259-4

ISSN: 2514-1759

Publication date: 14 May 2018

This content is currently only available as a PDF

Citation

(2018), "Index", Corporate Social Responsibility (Business and Society 360, Vol. 2), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 423-438. https://doi.org/10.1108/S2514-175920180000002015

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2018 Emerald Publishing Limited


INDEX

Academia
, 78, 115, 178

Accountability
, 44, 55

Activist groups
, 61, 306

Activists
, 61

peace
, 12

social
, 62, 306

stakeholder
, 309, 316, 361

Advocacy Groups/NGOs
, 120

Advocacy/NGO groups
, 87, 98, 110–112

Agency theory
, 312, 314, 315

Aggressive behavior
, 271

Agenda Iris 21 (AI21)
, 163

Alienation types
, 273

All India Management Association (AIMA)
, 111

Anglo-American “liberal-minimalist” concept
, 372

Anglo-American model
, 372

Animalistic dehumanization
, 271, 273–274

Asia, CSR across
, 76

in China
, 114–123

contextual framework
, 77–78

in India
, 100–114

in Japan
, 78–89

in Korea
, 89–100

Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India (ASSOCHAM)
, 111

Atlantic, The
, 121

Authenticate microsocial norms
, 364

B Lab
, 247, 248–249, 252, 253

Belgian Network for Social Cohesion
, 151

Belgium, CSR implementation in
, 150–151

Benefit Corporations (B Corps)
, 247–248, 249, 250, 254, 257–258, 260, 389

Benefit Movement
, 247

future research directions
, 260–261

history
, 247–248

indicators of movement success
, 253–255

organizational forms
, 248–251

practical implications
, 259–260

social movements and organizations
, 251–252

sustained contention and types of movement organizations
, 255–259

theoretical developments
, 251

Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)
, 102–103, 109

Blogs, external media
, 164

Bolster corporate legitimacy, strategic management of communicative space to
, 361–363

Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE)
, 102

Boom (see “Dot-com” bubble)

Brussels Environment
, 157, 163

Brussels municipalities
, 159

Brussels-Capital Region
, 149–150, 162, 163, 168

Business

case for CSR
, 57–59, 133–134

ethics
, 48–49, 76, 90, 282

firm
, 21

as instrument of broad societal service
, 10

and investment practice
, 390–393

leaders
, 289

level actions
, 49

nature
, 284

objectives
, 389

role in society
, 396–397

schools
, 275

sustainability
, 27

Business & Society field (B&S)
, 226

domain
, 230

field
, 226–227, 356

scholar
, 406

Calvinism
, 280

Carnegie Corporation
, 11–12

C-Corp
, 249

Center for Political Accountability
, 313

Centre for Social Markets (CSM)
, 103

Chief Movement Organizations
, 255–256, 258–259

China, CSR in (see also Korea, CSR in)
, 114

in academia
, 115

Chinese managers
, 123

civil society institutions
, 120–121

contextual analysis
, 116–120

in management
, 115–116

Price Waterhouse study
, 122

safety net
, 121–122

Chinese Communist Party (CCP)
, 118, 308–309

Citizen activism examples
, 161

“Civic republican” model of citizenship
, 372

Civil Rights Movement
, 251–252

Civil society
, 34

institutions
, 86–87, 97–99, 110–114, 120–121

stakeholders
, 361

Civilization

central values of
, 394

human
, 396

threats to
, 397

Claimants
, 14

Classical social sciences
, 408–409

Climate change
, 178, 384–385

Code of Conduct
, 19

Code of Ethics
, 19

Cognitive legitimacy
, 362, 365

Collective value
, 395

Communication
, 167

“Communitarian” model of citizenship
, 372

Community
, 183–184

engagement
, 373

programs
, 308

relations
, 212

Community Chest
, 11

Competition
, 387, 388

cooperation vs.
, 162–163

geopolitical competition and realignments
, 24

Complementary reciprocity
, 286

COMPUSTAT database
, 215, 217

Conceptualizing stakeholders
, 284–285

Confederation of Indian Industry (CII)
, 111

Conflict
, 266, 368

Confucianism
, 94, 117

Connecting component
, 155–156

Conscious capitalism
, 41, 53, 54

Conscious moral judgments
, 362

Contemporary management
, 289

Contextual analysis

CSR in China
, 116–120

CSR in India
, 104–110

CSR in Japan
, 80–88

CSR in Korea
, 93–97

Continental model
, 372

Contingency factors
, 336–345

identified in recent meta-analyses
, 329–331

Contingency factors
, 336–345

identified in recent meta-analyses
, 329–331

Contributor-claimants
, 14

Control variables
, 216–217

Conventional economic theory
, 358

Cooperation
, 162–163

Corporate
, 42

avalanche of corporate accounting scandals
, 380–381

citizenship
, 21, 51–52, 183, 372

“corporate-centered” structures
, 368

data
, 409

elites
, 253–254

irresponsibility
, 407

level actions
, 49

managers
, 9–11, 357

philanthropy
, 406

political investments
, 310

practices
, 384–385

private sector
, 148–149

sector
, 5

social responsiveness
, 282–283

Corporate activism

and CSR
, 61–62

on social issues
, 42

Corporate ecological sustainability (CES)
, 326, 327

CES–CFP meta-analysis
, 330

CES–CFP theory matrix
, 332

relatively small positive relationship between CES and CFP
, 327–328

Corporate environmental disclosure (CED)
, 343

Corporate financial performance (CFP)
, 42, 57, 326

CSP–CFP relationship
, 57–59

dimensions
, 343

relatively small positive relationship between CES and CFP
, 327–328

Corporate Global Citizenship (1990s–2000)
, 21

achieving corporate and planetary sustainability
, 21–24

drivers
, 24

policy instruments
, 24–26

Corporate governance
, 183–184, 286

of firm
, 298

reforms
, 15

variables
, 312

Corporate Governance category
, 212–213

Corporate misbehaviour, repeated instances of
, 14

Corporate political activity (CPA)
, 296, 300, 303–305, 310

and CSR
, 296–297

future research possibilities
, 317

macro-level factors
, 299–309

micro-level factors
, 310–315

multi-level factors
, 299

nonmarket strategy
, 297–298

Corporate Responsibility (CR)
, 40, 41, 379

Corporate social and financial performance (CSP/CFP)
, 360

Corporate Social Irresponsibility (CSiR)
, 42, 62–63, 179

decline
, 218, 220–224

empirical tests of trends in over time
, 214–224

Corporate social performance (CSP)
, 44, 57, 183, 283–284, 406

CSP–CFP relationship
, 57–59

Corporate Social Rectitude
, 283

Corporate social responsibility (CSR) (see also Legislated CSR (LCSR))
, 4, 40, 74, 133, 134, 148, 246, 267, 272, 273, 283, 289, 296, 308, 327, 356, 377, 378, 379, 406

business case for
, 57–59

business ethics
, 48–49

in China
, 114–123

and citizenship
, 76

committee
, 139

and competing and complementary concepts
, 48

competing concepts
, 52–55

conceptual development and meaning
, 42–48

contextual elements for understanding country’s CSR
, 75

corporate activism and
, 61–62

corporate citizenship
, 51–52

to corporate system responsibility
, 355

and CPA
, 296–297

CSI
, 62–63

CSP–CFP relationship
, 57–59

CSR Meme mentions in Factiva
, 382

CSR-related memes in Google Scholar
, 381

CSV
, 358–359

definition problem
, 356–358

dehumanization and
, 284–286

doctrine, drivers, policy instruments
, 6–9

embracing strategic ambiguity
, 367–368

in emerging economies
, 60–61

empirical tests of trends
, 214–224

evolution
, 77

future research possibilities
, 317

implementation in EU and Belgium
, 150–151

in India
, 100–114

ISCT as potential vehicle for value integration within
, 363–365

in Japan
, 78–89

in Korea
, 89–100

law
, 143

legislation
, 134

legislation analyzing in India
, 140–141

legitimacy
, 406–407

limits
, 378–383

macro-level factors
, 299–309

methods
, 409–410

micro-level factors
, 310–315

multi-level factors
, 299

network approaches to realizing corporate system responsibility
, 370–373

networking
, 368–370

newer research avenues
, 55

nonmarket strategy
, 297–298

parallel evolution of CSR scholarship
, 279–284

PCSR
, 56–57

phases
, 9–26

research
, 406, 407

rise
, 378–379

scholarship
, 405

SEPTE categorization
, 408

speculative Millennial Future
, 26

stakeholder management
, 49–50

sustainability
, 50–51

theory
, 408–409

trends, questions, and prospects
, 32–34

in United States
, 5–6

upstream/downstream
, 59–60

Corporate Social Responsibility Movement
, 251–252

Corporate Social Responsiveness (1960s–1970s)
, 12

drivers of
, 14–15

policy instruments
, 15–16

responding to social demands
, 12–14

Corporate Social Stewardship (1950s–1960s)
, 9

corporate managers as public trustees
, 9–11

drivers
, 11

policy instruments
, 11–12

Corporate system responsibility, CSR to

CSV
, 358–359

definition problem
, 356–358

embracing strategic ambiguity
, 367–368

ISCT as potential vehicle for value integration within CSR
, 363–365

limitations of “strategic CSR”
, 360–361

moral hazard of trying to manage moral legitimacy
, 365–367

network approaches to realizing
, 370–373

networking as emerging organizational CSR framework
, 368–370

political CSR
, 361–363

Corporate/Business Ethics (1980s–1990s)
, 16

drivers
, 17–19

fostering ethical corporate culture
, 16–17

policy instruments
, 19–21

Cosmos
, 290

Crab mentality
, 389–390

Creating Shared Value (CSV)
, 52, 91, 358–359

CSI (see Corporate Social Irresponsibility (CSiR))

“CSR pays”
, 33

CSR-Centre of Excellence (CoE)
, 103

CSR4
, 290

Cultural

anthropologists
, 16

dimensions
, 83

Daashaant practice
, 107

Decision-making process
, 154, 159

“Defeat device”
, 381

Dehumanization
, 267, 271–273

and CSR
, 284–286

Dehumanizing processes
, 267

Deliberative democracy
, 366

Department of Finance (DOF)
, 136

Department of Trade and Industry (DTI)
, 136

Dependent variables
, 215–216

Descriptive statistics
, 218

correlations
, 219

Dialogism
, 367

Digital technologies
, 31

Dignity
, 395–396

Dimensions of national culture
, 340

Diversity
, 183–184

“Dot-com” bubble
, 380

Dubious social performance
, 230

eBay v. Newmark
, 246

Economic, Governance, Social, Ethical, and Environmental dimensions (EGSEE dimensions)
, 28

Economic bottom line
, 50

Economic payoffs of CES

contingency factors identified in recent meta-analyses
, 329–331

future research
, 336

in-depth exploration of particulars of circumstance
, 336–342

measurement contingencies
, 328–329

meta-analytics
, 327

opportunism
, 334

outbalancing
, 336

overcoming methodological weaknesses
, 342–345

proactive vs. reactive strategic approach
, 329

relationship between CES and CFP
, 326–327, 331–332

relatively small positive relationship between CES and CFP
, 327–328

slack resources
, 333

sustainable value creation
, 332–333

trade-off
, 334–335

vicious circle
, 335

virtuous circle
, 333–334

Economic prosperity
, 50

Economic values
, 388

Economies
, 387

Emerging economies, CSR in
, 60–61

Empirical studies using KLD database
, 184–212

Empirical tests of trends in CSR and CSIR over time
, 214

control variables
, 216–217

dependent variables
, 215–216

descriptive statistics
, 218, 219

findings
, 218

growth of CSR and decline of CSiR
, 218, 220–224

independent variables
, 216

methodology
, 214

research design and analytic method
, 217

sample creation
, 214–215

Employee relations
, 183–184

Employees’ Provident Funds & Miscellaneous Provisions Act (EPF & MP Act)
, 113

Employees’ State Insurance Act (ESI Act)
, 112

Environment(al)
, 183–184

bottom line
, 50–51

quality
, 50

rule
, 182

Environmental, social, and governance (ESG)
, 379

Environmentalists
, 12

Equity
, 389

Essentialism
, 364

Ethical climate
, 17

Ethical issues in society and business
, 48

Ethical relativism
, 364

Ethical rule
, 182

Ethics
, 284

aspirations and goals
, 19

Ethnic genocide
, 271

European Network for Social Cohesion
, 151

European Union (EU)
, 150–151

‘Exemplary’ corporate performance
, 230

“Explicit” CSR
, 47

External media
, 164, 165

External websites, external media
, 164

Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI)
, 62

Federalist Papers
, 268

Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI)
, 111

Federation of Korean Industries (FKI)
, 89, 93

Financial performance (FP)
, 407

Financial value
, 395

Firm

ecologizing role
, 33

economizing role
, 33

financial performance
, 217

Firm-level factors
, 310–313

risk
, 216–217

size
, 216

Fixed linear effects of time
, 218, 222

“Flagship” report (2016)
, 396

Flyers, internal media
, 164

Ford foundation
, 11–12

Formal institutional factors
, 299

Fortune (magazine)
, 406, 410

Foundational management theories
, 272–273

Funding
, 160–161

“Fuzzy-set” qualitative comparative analysis techniques
, 59

Generalized social unrest
, 14

Generational changes
, 29–30

Generic stakeholder theory
, 284

Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI)
, 395

Ghoshal’s analysis
, 274

Glacial pace of CSR implementation

actual growth of CSiR in practice over time
, 227

contributions, limitations
, 230–233

“differentiated choice” environment
, 230

empirical studies using KLD database
, 184–212

empirical tests of trends in CSR and CSIR over time
, 214–224

growth of CSR and CSiR
, 225

institutional theory
, 179–182

“iron cage” hypothesis
, 228

KLD
, 183, 224

one dimension in isolation
, 213

review of historical data
, 182

stakeholders
, 229–230

theoretical context
, 179

“traditional” method
, 226

Glass Bead Game, The (Hesse)
, 411

Global business citizen
, 52

Global capitalism
, 362

Global Corporate Citizens
, 25

Global corporate citizenship
, 52

“Global Eight” codes
, 25

Global ethical norms
, 365

Global Financial Crisis (GFC)
, 381

Global Reporting Initiative (GRI)
, 361

Globalization
, 22, 362–363

Golden straightjacket
, 362

Government

data
, 409

role in CSR
, 148

Greenwashing
, 59, 257, 334, 360

Grounded theory
, 408

Growth
, 343–344

Growth curve modeling
, 217

Growth of CSR and decline of CSiR
, 218

institutional theory
, 223

KLD
, 222

R&D expenditure
, 224

RCM using HLM
, 220–221

“Halo” of firms’
, 410

Hegemonic “meta-narratives”
, 366

Hierarchical linear modeling (HLM)
, 217

High-polluting industries
, 13

High-risk operations
, 13

Higher-order functioning
, 271

Hindu rate of growth
, 106

Hinduism
, 107

Holistic approach
, 284

Human culture
, 31

Human nature
, 271

Human rights
, 183–184, 396

advocacy
, 18

dimension
, 212, 225

Humanity

integration into management theory
, 287–291

of stakeholders
, 290

Humanness
, 271, 272

“Hybrid” political-economic system
, 114

“Implicit” CSR
, 47

In-depth exploration of particulars of circumstance
, 336–345

Independent variables
, 216

India

civil society institutions
, 110–114

contextual analysis
, 104

CSR
, 100, 114

CSR in academy
, 102–104

CSR in management
, 104

CSR legislation analyzing in
, 140–141

promises and outcomes of India’s CSR legislations
, 141–143

Indicators of movement success
, 253–255

Indirect claimants
, 14

Individual factors
, 313–315

Individual life-support units
, 22

Indonesia, CSR in
, 136

Industrial revolution
, 266, 280

Inequality
, 384–385, 388

Informal institutional factors
, 299

Informal network governance mechanisms
, 371

Information
, 309

Infrahumanization
, 271, 273–274, 278–279

Institutional approaches
, 365

Institutional context
, 299

CPA
, 303–305

pCSR
, 300–303

peace through commerce
, 305

social movement research
, 305–307

Institutional factors
, 303

Institutional legitimacy
, 365

Institutional theory
, 179–182, 369

Instrumental/strategic CSR
, 367

Integration
, 289

Integrative creating shared value
, 360–361

Integrative social contracting theory (ISCT)
, 363–365

Integrative typology
, 305

Internal media
, 164

Internet bubble (see “Dot-com” bubble)

Interplanetary explorations
, 30–31

Investment law
, 135

“Iron cage” hypothesis
, 228

Iron Law of Responsibility
, 282

Isolated component
, 154–155

Japan, CSR in
, 78

CSR in academia
, 78

CSR in management
, 78–80

institutionalization of CSR management
, 88

Japanese corporations
, 89

Key administrators or politicians
, 158

Key political figures
, 147, 158–159, 160

Kinder, Lydenberg, Domini & Co (KLD)
, 59, 179, 183, 224

empirical studies using KLD database
, 184–212

“Knee jerk”
, 13

Korea, CSR in (see also China, CSR in)
, 89

aspects of Korea’s context
, 100

civil society institutions
, 97–99

contextual analysis
, 93

CSR in academy
, 90

CSR in management
, 90–93

Korea Sustainability Investing Forum (KoSIF)
, 98

Labor unions
, 86–87, 97–98, 110, 120

Labor-intensive firms
, 13

Large system change
, 384–385

Law and custom
, 21

Leadership
, 288

behavior
, 362

corporate
, 302

factors
, 298

of municipality
, 153–154

paradigms
, 289

responsible
, 315

styles
, 56

Legal challenges
, 246, 247

Legislated CSR (LCSR) (see also Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR))
, 134

CSR legislation analyzing in India
, 140–141

evolution and enactment of India’s Company Act (2013)
, 136–140

promises and outcomes of India’s CSR legislations
, 141–143

voluntary vs.
, 134–136

Legitimacy
, 361

Bolster corporate
, 361–363

moral hazard of trying to “managing” moral
, 365–367

seeking
, 180

“Liability approach” to CSR
, 59

Liberal CEOs
, 206, 314

Liberal Democratic Party (LDP)
, 85

“Liberal-minimalist” concept
, 371

License Raj
, 105

Linear mixed modeling (LMM)
, 217

Liquidity
, 343, 344

LLC
, 249

Local Agenda 21 (LA21)
, 150

coordinators
, 158–160

and drivers for implementation
, 152–156

as proxy of SR implementation in municipalities
, 152

Local catalyst
, 154, 156, 160

Long-term sustainability strategy
, 25

Low-Engagement Organizations
, 257

M. B. Act, 1961 (M. B. Act) (see Maternity Benefit Act)

Macro-level factors (see also Micro-level factors)
, 299

external factors
, 299–307

political context
, 307–309

relationship between CPA and CSR
, 301

Management theory
, 272, 274

integrating humanity into
, 287–291

Mandated CSR
, 135

Market-based measurement of CFP
, 328

Market-based strategies
, 296

Market-style economy
, 4, 5, 10, 11

Material flow cost-accounting system
, 333

Material wealth
, 50, 273, 395

Maternity Benefit Act, 1961 (M. B. Act)
, 113

“Mean CSR” score
, 213

Measurement contingencies
, 328–329

Mechanistic dehumanization
, 271, 273, 277, 285

Media
, 87, 98–99, 112, 121

attention
, 165

impact
, 164–165

Mediators
, 58, 316, 340

Memes
, 385–388

Meta-analytics
, 327–331

Metaphysical quest
, 23–24

Micro-level factors (see also Macro-level factors)
, 310

firm-level factors
, 310–313

individual factors
, 313–315

Millennial future (2000–3000)
, 26

Millennials
, 29, 34

major characteristics
, 29

newish Quality-of-Life Values
, 24

workplace focus
, 29–30

Mission statements
, 19, 394

Moderators
, 58, 316, 328, 340

Modern era of CSR (1950s–1990s)
, 281–284

Monologic exercise
, 361

“Moral free space”
, 363–364

Moral legitimacy
, 362

of corporate culture and business practices
, 363

moral hazard of trying to managing
, 365–367

Morality
, 370, 371

social
, 118

unnatural separation
, 274

Movement organizations

benefit movement organizational forms
, 248–251

sustained contention and types
, 255–259

typology
, 261

MSCI ESG Research
, 214

Multinational enterprises (MNEs)
, 60, 306, 307

Municipalities

LA21 as proxy of SR implementation in
, 152

local Agenda 21 and drivers for implementation
, 152–156

social responsibility and
, 151

MyGov
, 111

Names-and-faces approach
, 285

National Association of Software and Services Companies (NASSCOM)
, 111

National culture dimensions
, 340

National Old Age Pension Scheme (NOAPS)
, 113

Negativity bias
, 330

Neoliberal narrative
, 378, 382–383, 389, 397

promulgators
, 388

Network/Networking

approaches to realizing corporate system responsibility
, 370

as emerging organizational CSR framework
, 368–370

governance
, 357, 371

support
, 163–164

New Socio-Economic Narrative construction
, 394–396

Non-contractual claimants (see Indirect claimants)

Non-governmental organizations (NGOs)
, 24, 79

Non-market strategies
, 296, 297–298, 300, 303

Normative nihilism
, 364

OECD’s Better Life Index
, 395

One Belt, One Road (OBOR)
, 122

Opportunism
, 334

Organizational/organizations
, 179–180

capacity
, 255, 259

legitimacy
, 361

redesign and training
, 13

responsibility
, 19

Outbalancing
, 336

Parallel evolution of CSR scholarship
, 279

modern era of CSR (1950s–1990s)
, 281–284

Stewards of Society (1920–1950)
, 280–281

wealth generators (1800s–1919)
, 279–280

Partners in Change (PiC)
, 103, 104

Partnerships
, 249, 266

Past performance, control variables
, 216

Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972 (P. G. Act)
, 113

Peace activists
, 12

Peace through commerce
, 300, 301, 305

People’s Solidarity for Participatory Democracy (PSPD)
, 98

P. G. Act, 1972 (P. G. Act) (see Payment of Gratuity Act)

Philanthropy
, 10, 104, 134

corporate
, 5, 6, 17, 138

private
, 357

strategic
, 11

Planetary boundaries
, 383

Political context
, 307–309

Political corporate social responsibility (PCSR) (see also Social responsibility (SR))
, 41, 55, 56–57, 300–303, 366

objective
, 302

as strategic management of communicative space
, 361–363

Political differences
, 162, 167

Political ties research
, 303

Political-normative approach
, 367

“Political” in pCSR
, 302

Pollution prevention
, 341

measures
, 329

strategies
, 329

Pragmatic approaches
, 365

Pragmatic discursive approach of Habermas
, 366

Pragmatic legitimacy
, 362

Principal driver
, 9, 11, 15

Principle of voluntarism
, 148–151

Principles of Scientific Management, The
, 268

Private property
, 359, 387

Private sector
, 15, 148, 168

companies
, 102

influencing
, 165–166

members
, 15–16

undertakings in India
, 138

Privatization
, 370–371, 387

Proactive strategic approach
, 329

Proactivity
, 168, 330

Procedural hypernorms
, 365

Profitability
, 142, 273, 280, 343

CES and
, 343

CSR and firm
, 283

financial
, 383

Public affairs departments
, 15

Public Centers for Social Welfare (OCMWs)
, 163

Public policy and government regulations
, 15

Public relations departments
, 11

Public responsibility
, 283

Public sector organizations
, 148, 167

in CSR
, 152, 158

example role
, 167–168

SR implementation in
, 149

Public sector undertakings (PSUs)
, 101, 104

Public trustees
, 10

corporate managers as
, 9–11

Purpose-driven businesses
, 41, 53–54

R&D intensity
, 217, 219, 220, 223, 342

Raison dêtre
, 19

Raj
, 105

Random coefficient modeling (RCM)
, 217, 218

Random linear effects of time
, 222

Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana (RSBY)
, 114

“Rawlsian Veil of ignorance”
, 364–365

Reactive strategic approach
, 329

Religion
, 290–291

ReportAlert website
, 32

Resource-based view (RBV)
, 329

Resource-dependency theory
, 311–313

Responsibility
, 43, 44, 51

Responsible behavior
, 285, 286, 291

Resurgence of religio-ethnic beliefs
, 17–18

Return on assets (ROA)
, 216, 409

Revlon v. McAndrews & Forbes Holdings
, 246

Rockefeller foundation
, 11–12

Safety net
, 88, 99–100, 112–114, 121–122

Sanpo-Yoshi, old merchant’s principle of
, 82

Scandinavian approach
, 358, 372

Science
, 290

Scientific management (see also Top management)
, 267, 268, 272, 273–279, 286, 291

dehumanization
, 267–268, 271–273

dehumanization and CSR
, 284–286

field of management
, 266–267

integrating humanity into management theory
, 287–291

management theory and practice
, 268–271

parallel evolution of CSR scholarship
, 279–284

SDGs
, 384, 386, 388

Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
, 136

“Silk Road Economic Belt”
, 122

Slack resources
, 333

Social
, 42–43

arrangements
, 371

audits
, 15

bottom line
, 50

connection approach to CSR
, 59

contracting process
, 369

contribution
, 89

enterprise
, 261

equity
, 50

justice
, 394, 396

policies
, 303

psychology
, 271

responsiveness
, 44

rule
, 182

scientists
, 17

services
, 302

value change inducing by new forms of technology
, 18

Social, economic, political, technological, and ecological environments of business (SEPTE categorization)
, 408

Social demands, responding to
, 12–14

Social movement organizations (SMOs)
, 61, 251–252

Social movement(s)
, 40, 247

research
, 305–307

studies
, 300

Social Responsibilities of Businessman (Bowen)
, 281

Social responsibility (SR) (see also Political corporate social responsibility (PCSR))
, 148, 327

within Brussels municipalities
, 148

Brussels-Capital Region
, 168

cooperation vs. competition
, 162–163

CSR implementation in EU and Belgium
, 150–151

findings
, 158

funding
, 160–161

governments in CSR
, 166

key political figures and LA21 coordinators
, 158–159

LA21 as proxy of SR implementation in municipalities
, 152

media impact
, 164–165

methodology
, 156–157

and municipalities
, 151–156

municipality
, 171

network support
, 163–164

private sector influence
, 165–166

public sector organizations
, 167

supplementary information for interviews
, 174

translated questionnaire
, 172–173

Social responsiveness, assigning strategic priority for
, 13

Social-choice investment advisory (SIA)
, 58–59

Social-impact awareness
, 12–13

Society of Entrepreneurs & Ecology (SEE)
, 116

Sociopolitical reputation
, 308

Sole proprietorship
, 249, 266

Southern Weekend, The
, 121

Speculative Millennial Future
, 26

big questions, puzzles, and challenges
, 30–32

generational changes
, 29–30

sustainability
, 22–23, 26–29

Spirituality
, 23–24

Stability
, 167, 303

Stakeholder(s)
, 14, 20, 21, 82–83, 168, 285, 340, 359, 397

advocates
, 357

engagement
, 358, 372

management
, 49–50, 212–213

management theory
, 357

mapping and implementation
, 13–14

model
, 284

pressure
, 361

scrutiny
, 309

theory
, 27, 49, 284

State-owned enterprises (SOEs)
, 116, 118

State-owned enterprises law
, 135

Stewards of Society (1920–1950)
, 280–281

Stock market performance
, 343, 344

Strategic ambiguity to cope with paradoxical tensions
, 367–368

Strategic approach
, 365

proactive vs. reactive
, 329

Strategic change
, 181, 231

Strategic CSR
, 363

framework
, 61

instrumental/strategic CSR
, 368

limitations
, 360–361

Strategic philanthropy
, 11

Substantive hypernorms
, 364, 365

Sullivan Principles
, 410

Supplementary information for interviews
, 174

Support Movement Organizations
, 256–257, 258–259

Supportive component model
, 154, 155

Sustainability
, 22–23, 26–29, 50–51, 380, 384–385, 394

corporate and planetary
, 21–24

network
, 163

strategies
, 28

Sustainable management
, 357

“Sustainable neighborhood” contract
, 161

Sustainable value creation
, 332–333

Sustained contention
, 255–259

System

change
, 385, 386

of systems
, 358, 365

System change, CSR to
, 377

confronting reality
, 396–397

creating powerful new story
, 388–394

CSR and its limits
, 379–383

CSR Meme mentions in Factiva
, 382

CSR-related memes in Google Scholar
, 381

large system change
, 383–384

memes
, 383

narrative and memes
, 385–388

rise and limits of CSR
, 378–379

Systematic soldiering
, 277

Target Movement Organizations (TMOs)
, 256, 258

Taylor’s management practices
, 280

Taylorism
, 268, 276, 278, 281, 286

Tech bubble (see “Dot-com” bubble)

The Energy Research Institute (TERI)
, 103

Theory
, 408–409

agency
, 312, 314, 315

CES–CFP theory matrix
, 332

contributions to
, 230–231

conventional economic
, 358

generic stakeholder
, 284

grounded
, 408

institutional
, 179–182

management
, 268–271

resource-dependency
, 311–313

stakeholder management
, 357

trade-off
, 334–335

Third Culture of popular science
, 290–291

Third-party certification
, 250

Thomson Reuter (ASSET4)
, 59

Time
, 163, 216

Time-varying control variables
, 222

“Tit-for-tat” moves
, 369

Top management
, 313, 314

attention and solicitude
, 14

decision-making
, 316

opportunity for
, 17

position
, 312

Trade-off theory
, 334–335

Transformative societal pressures
, 6

Triple-bottom line accountability (TBL accountability)
, 50, 357

TRIVISI
, 151

“Twenty-First-Century Maritime Silk Road”
, 122

U-shaped relationships
, 343

UN Global Compact
, 361, 365

crafting
, 358

principles
, 386, 388

Unionization

in India
, 110

Japan’s unionization rate
, 86

Uniquely human characteristics
, 271

United Arab Emirates (UAE)
, 134

United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights
, 18

United States
, 29, 47, 74, 108–109, 124, 138, 381

Companies in
, 87

CSR in
, 5–6, 9, 40, 47

military assistance from
, 95

political context
, 307–309

University of Memphis in
, 27

Universalism
, 396

Upstream/downstream CSR
, 55, 59–60

Utility-maximizing individual rationality
, 370

Value integration, ISCT as potential vehicle for
, 363–365

Value(s)
, 18, 23, 283, 284, 388

creation school
, 332

quality-of-life
, 24

Variance inflation factor (VIF)
, 218n5

Vicious circle
, 335

Vietnam War, opponents of
, 12

Virtuous circle
, 333–334

Voluntary CSR
, 85, 134–136

W questions
, 337, 339–340

what
, 337, 338, 339

by what means
, 337, 338, 341–342

in what way
, 337, 338, 342

when
, 337, 338, 341

where
, 337, 338, 340

who
, 337, 338, 339

why
, 337, 338, 339, 340

Wealth generators
, 279–280

Wealth maximization
, 246

interests
, 387–388

shareholder
, 246–247, 260

Websites

of Agenda
, 21, 157

internal media
, 164

Welfare Work movement
, 280

Wicked complexity
, 385, 388

Wicked problems
, 370, 371, 384, 385

World Trade Organization (WTO)
, 76, 115fn, 119

World Wide Web (WWW)
, 24

Zakaat practice
, 107

Zicklin Index
, 313