Contents note continued: 11.Globalizing Corporate Citizenship: Political and Theoretical Considerations / Peter Newell -- 12.Governing Value Creation: New Policy and Organizational Approaches for the Global Economy / Anne-Laure Winkler
Text of Note
Machine generated contents note: 1.Introduction: The Economic, Political, and Ethical Challenges of Corporate Social Responsibility / Colin Crouch -- 2.How Serious is CSR? A Critical Perspective / Elaine Sternberg -- 3.Past, Present, and Future Corporate Responsibility: Achievements and Aspirations / Alyson Warhurst -- 4.How Serious is CSR? A Corporate Perspective from IBM / Celia Moore -- 5.Corporate Responsibility for Pharmaceutical Corporations / Klaus M. Leisinger -- 6.The Responsible Corporation: Regulating the Supply Chain / Christian R. Thauer -- 7.CSR: A New Form of Social Regulation for Labour Relations within Transnational Companies / Andre Sobczak -- 8.The Governance of Global Supply Chains / Antonio Tencati -- 9.Promoting CSR through the United Nations: Developmental and Governance Implications / Peter Utting -- 10.Corporations and Citizenship in New Institutions of Global Governance / Dirk Matten --
0
0
SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
No longer only the domain of corporate public relations, corporate social responsibility (CSR) has now become a serious concern for many firms and a major sphere of academic research. However, most strikingly, by encouraging corporations to play a role in economic governance, particularly at the global level, CSR also raises issues for political science, public policy, and the world of politics as a whole