Title: CSR and Sport: Background and Research Directions
1CSR and Sport Background and Research Directions
- Kathy Babiak, Ph.D.
- University of Michigan
2The CSR literature
- Friedman (1962) an organizations
responsibility is to its shareholders--to make
money (through products and/or services). - Stakeholder perspective not just responsible to
shareholders but to stakeholders that can affect
/ be affected by an organization (Donaldson
Preston, 1995 Freeman, 1984) - CSR as strategic response (Bruch Walter, 2005
Hess Warren, 2005 Porter Kramer, 2006) or as
insurance for future misdeeds (Gardberg
Fombrun, 2006 Godfrey, 2005 )
3LEGAL
ETHICAL
Carroll, 1979, 1999
DISCRETIONARY
4COMMUNITY WELFARE
PHILANTHROPY
ACCOUNTING PRACTICES
EMPLOYEE TREATMENT
ENVIRONMENT
LEGAL
PRODUCT SAFETY
HEALTH
ETHICAL
EDUCATION
POVERTY
DISCRETIONARY
Carroll, 1979, 1999
5CSR defined
- CSR represents a set of actions that
- appear to further some social good,
- extend beyond the explicit pecuniary interests
of the firm, - and are not required by law
- (McWilliams Siegel, 2000)
6Unique features of sport CSR
- Mass media distribution and communication power
- Youth appeal
- Social interaction
- (Smith Westerbeek, 2007)
- Unique, valuable and rare resources
- Celebrity / brand power to convene partners
passion / emotion invoked by sport - (Wolfe et al., 2006)
7CSR and Sport The Landscape
- Professional sport Leagues, Teams, Athletes
- Sport related foundations
- Sport manufacturers Reebok, Nike
- Sport mega-events / Olympic sport
8The perspective of the players
- ATHLETE
- I started this Foundation because I really felt
the need to try to help people. As a professional
athlete, you are in a position and given the
opportunity to really have an impact on more than
just your immediate surroundings. For me to be
able to do that is something thats sometimes
challenging, but always worthwhile.
(Steve Nash, Phoenix Suns) - TEAM
- We recognize that our actions on the court are
meager compared to our greater efforts and
actions within our own community. - (Michael Heisley, Memphis Grizzlies Owner)
- LEAGUE
- "Basketball has the ability to bring people
together and address important social issues at
the same time. (NBA Commissioner David
Stern)
9COMMUNITY WELFARE (e.g., MLB partnership with
BGCA NFL partnership with United Way)
EMPLOYEE TREATMENT (e.g., NFL Concussion)
ENVIRONMENT (e.g., MLB Team GreeningNHL Green
Initiative)
LEGAL
EDUCATION (e.g., NBAs Read to Achieve)
ETHICAL
HEALTH (e.g., NFL Play 60 NHL Hockey Fights
Cancer)
DISCRETIONARY
Carroll, 1979, 1999
10Diffusion of CSR in Professional Sport
11However.
- Despite the prevalence and magnitude of socially
responsible activities within the sport industry,
little attention has been devoted to
understanding the motivations, strategies, or
outcomes derived from them.
12CSR in Sport A research perspective
- Excellent context since
- All professional sport teams / leagues have
community outreach programs / foundations. - Studying organizational phenomena within sport
provides rare research advantages - availability of performance data / clarity of
outcomes, - transparency of intended and unintended
behaviors, - which result in unique opportunities to observe,
measure, and compare variables and relationships
of interest over time.
13What does the research future hold?
- Margolis and Walsh (2003) called for a change in
empirical research away from justifying CSR to
examination of the impacts of CSR on recipients
and society at large (e.g., reductions in
poverty, increases in health). Research heeding
that call has yet to reach the publication stage.
- Research complex problems that span disciplinary
boundaries (e.g., public policy, management,
public health, education, economics, corporate
governance, social work) - Engaged scholarship produce actionable
knowledge
14CSR and Sport Research
- Examining outcome variables i.e., to what extent
do particular programs address the social issues
e.g., how much has the reading of students
attending NBA Read-To-Achieve sessions improved? - Other outcome variables may include to what
extent have such programs had corporate
reputational benefits? - How do these programs affect team (fan) loyalty
and other rewards an organization may expect to
receive from socially responsible efforts? - And on a broader scale, how much does a community
benefit from a professional sport teams CSR
related efforts? - How can / do managers substitute involvement in
some CSR activities for lack of involvement in
others? - How are sporting organizations (players and
coaches, teams and unions, and sport governing
bodies) responding to (both reactively and
proactively) ethical blowback? (e.g., performance
enhancing drug scandal) - In terms of the natural environment, what
effective measures can sports organizations take
to reduce levels of pollution, congestion, and
garbage around their venues? - Partnerships to maximize social benefits how
are they formed? And how are socially responsible
initiatives enacted? - How will the expanding global nature of sport
influence CSR initiatives?