Corporate social responsibility and corporate governance :
[Book]
the contribution of economic theory and related disciplines /
edited by Lorenzo Sacconi [and others].
New York :
Palgrave Macmillan,
2011.
xli, 441 pages :
illustrations ;
24 cm.
IEA conference volume ;
no. 149
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introduction -- pt. I: Nature of the firm and its governance structure: Human asset specificity, team production and the stakeholder approach -- Corporate governance: a contractual and organisational perspective -- Human-asset essentiality and corporate social capital in a stakeholders-society perspective -- Stakeholder theory as a basis for capitalism -- Behavioral economics, federalism and the triumph of stakeholder theory -- Specific investment and corporate law -- pt. II: Normative foundations of CSR as a corporate governance model: Social contract of the firm, reputations and rational agency -- Corporate social responsibility in a market economy -- A Rawlsian view on CSR as multistakeholder model of corporate governance -- A Rawlsian view on CSR and the game theory of its implementation: Fairness and equilibrium -- When reputation is not enough: justifying corporate social responsibility -- Rational association and corporate -- pt. III: CSR, social standards and multi-stakeholder organisations according to the behavioral economics perspectives -- The role of standardization, certification and assurance service in global commerce -- Voluntary co-determination produces sustainable competitive advantage -- Corporate trust games in modern knowledge economies -- Effects of different stakeholder groups strategic control on organisational effectiveness and well-being of customers and employees: An empirical investigation -- Trusting, trustworthiness and CSR: Some experiments and implications.
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"Corporate social responsibility is seen in this book as multi-stakeholder approach to corporate governance. This volume outlines neo-institutional and stakeholder theories of the firm, new rational choice and social contract normative models, self regulatory and soft law models, and the advances from behavioral economics"--