ABSTRACT

This book examines the conception of corporate social responsibility (CSR) in Africa, expanding it’s frontiers beyond corporate reporting, voluntary corporate charity and community development projects.

Taking a corporate law perspective on CSR, the author combines theory and practice to explain how CSR interacts with of sustainable development and sets an agenda for effective operationalization in Africa. The book not only devises an enforcement mechanism towards embedding effective CSR and sustainable development in Africa but also addresses CSR greenwash on the continent. The author critically examines CSR practices, legal and regulatory techniques in Nigeria and South Africa in the context of contexts of international regulatory dialogues and shows how corporate socially responsible behaviour can be effectively embedded within business communities in Africa.

Increasing our understanding of the theoretical, legal and regulatory frameworks supporting corporate responsibility, this book will be of interest to scholars, policy makers and practitioners in the fields of Africa law, corporate law, corporate social responsibility and African business.

part I|126 pages

Background, theories and global outlook

chapter 1|35 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|47 pages

Theoretical underpinnings of CSR practices

part II|46 pages

CSR conceptual and regulatory framework in Africa

chapter 4|28 pages

CSR in Nigeria

chapter 5|16 pages

CSR in South Africa

part III|42 pages

CSR and regionalism in Africa