ABSTRACT

The "business case" for corporate social responsibility, which suggests that socially and environmentally aware companies can expect to reap financial rewards, is seemingly gaining widespread acceptance within the business community. This is particularly apparent in the ever-increasing number of prominent companies parading their social, ethical and environmental credentials by producing paper- or web-based social and environmental, or sustainability, reports. In so doing, reporting companies claim, they are demonstrating a clear commitment to transparency and accountability to their key stakeholder groups. However, in the prevailing voluntaristic, business-case-centred climate within which such initiatives are taking place, little thought appears to have gone into the question of how stakeholders, other than the capital provider group, can actually use corporate disclosures offered in order to hold management accountable for the social and environmental consequences of their actions. While much corporate rhetoric abounds concerning notions of stakeholder dialogue and engagement, rigorous analysis of the governance implications of their claimed commitment to the principles of corporate social responsibility is largely conspicuous by its absence. 

Corporate Social Responsibility, Accountability and Governance seeks to explore this "missing link" between CSR (and associated reporting initiatives) and governance mechanisms that are capable of embracing true stakeholder accountability. A wide range of case studies, drawing on experiences of both public- and private-sector initiatives in Europe, the United States, Canada, South America and Asia, offer insightful analysis of the complex relationships between the state, the market and civil society in the development of CSR, accountability and sustainable development. 

 The book employs a multidisciplinary perspective in order to analyse the political, social, economic, technological, legal and organisational shaping of CSR. The complexities underpinning the concept are thereby clearly drawn out and the gross oversimplifications inherent in the prevailing consultancy-driven, business-case literature painfully exposed. Above all, the book offers a sound, practically and theoretically informed contribution to public policy debate and reflects and builds on urgent calls from public- and private-sector policy-makers as well as academics to develop better governance and accountability frameworks for business to deal with the imperatives of social responsibility, sustainable development and ethics. 

This book is divided into five parts. In Part 1, the complex concepts of responsibility, accountability and governance are discussed, and in particular the presumed relationships between the state, the market and civil society in improving accountability and governance are explored and critiqued. Part 2 consists of chapters relating to corporate social responsibility and stakeholder theory. Part 3 is concerned with empirical studies covering governance structures, networking and corporate social responsibility. Part 4 deals with corporate governance and its implications for regulators and civil society. Part 5 discusses multinational companies and how they impact on national governance regimes. Finally, a summary is provided with emerging international patterns of accountability and governance structures. 

Corporate Social Responsibility, Accountability and Governance will be essential reading for public and private policy-makers and practitioners and academics interested in how CSR can become more than a soundbite, and rather a substantial force for better global corporate governance and accountability.

part 1|95 pages

Emerging governance structures, risks and networking

chapter 1|17 pages

Broadening the notion of governance from the organisation to the domain

A Study of Municipal Water Systems in Canada

chapter 2|15 pages

Regulation, responsibility and representation

Challenges for Intra-Organisational Communication

chapter 6|25 pages

Risk regulation regimes in aviation

Were the Chips Ever Really down in the UK's Management of Y2K?

part 2|46 pages

Corporate social responsibility and stakeholder theory

chapter 7|14 pages

Seeking global solutions for the common good

A New World Order and Corporate Social Responsibility

chapter 8|13 pages

Toward better governance

The Stakeholder Partnership Framework

chapter 9|18 pages

Adding the stakeholder value

Governance Convergence in the Private, Public and Not-For-Profit Sectors

part 3|81 pages

Empirical studies on emerging governance structures and corporate social responsibility

chapter 11|16 pages

CSR in the Scandinavian countries

A Review of Voluntary Versus Regulated

chapter 13|21 pages

Putting governance to work in a US company

The Carris Experience*

chapter 14|9 pages

Networks for environmental management

Involving Public and Quasi-Public Organisations for Market Development towards Sustainability in Rio De Janeiro, Brazil

part 4|65 pages

Corporate governance and its implications for regulators and civil society

chapter 15|13 pages

Corporate governance models

International Legal Perspectives

chapter 17|20 pages

A systemic view of US government in market governance

Lessons Learned from the California Electricity Crisis

chapter 18|21 pages

Good governance and anti-corruption mobilisation

Do Russian NGOs Have Any Say?*

part 5|48 pages

Multinational companies and their implications for the new governance structures, regulators and civil society

chapter 19|16 pages

NGO-business collaborations and the law

Sustainability, Limitations of Law, and the Changing Relationship between Companies and NGOs

chapter 21|10 pages

Concluding remarks on emerging governance structures and practices

The State, the Market and the Voice of Civil Society