Title: Corporate Social Responsibility
1Corporate Social Responsibility
- Presentation to The Valley Society for Human
Resource Management, November 14, 2006 - Deborah Bishop, Ph. D.
- Professor of Management
- Saginaw Valley State University
2True or False?
- Businesss only responsibility is to make a
profit for the stockholders.
3Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
- What is Corporate Social Responsibility?
- According to Archie Carroll, CSR is a business
organizations responsibilities in 4 areas - Economic
- Legal
- Ethical
- Philanthropic
- To whom does the corporation have
responsibilities? - Its stakeholders
4Market stakeholders of business
Employees
Stockholders
Distributors, Wholesalers, Retailers
Business firm
Creditors
Customers
Suppliers
Source Lawrence, A.T., Weber, J. and Post, J.E.
Business and Society, 11th ed.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin, 2005.
5Nonmarket stakeholders of business
Communities
Governments
General Public
Business firm
Activist Groups
Business Support Groups
Media
Source Lawrence, A.T., Weber, J. and Post, J.E.
Business and Society, 11th ed.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin, 2005.
6Corporate Citizenship (CC)
- Proactively addressing business and society
issues. - Building stakeholder partnerships.
- Discovering business opportunities through social
strategic goals. - Transforming a concern for financial performance
into a vision of corporate financial and social
performance.
7Arguments Against CSR/CC
- Its too expensive.
- Its illegal. Managers have a responsibility to
return profits to the stockholders, who may then
spend it on philanthropic causes if they wish. - Its inefficient. Businesses loses its
efficiency in the delivery of its goods and
services.
8Arguments In Favor Of CSR/CC
- In the long run, social responsibility is in the
self-interest of business. - Social responsibility can be profitable.
- Being socially responsible can help avoid
increased government regulation. - Business is a social institution with social
responsibilities.
9Arguments In Favor Of CSR/CC (ctd.)
- Business is a social institution with social
responsibilities (ctd.) - The corporation is granted a charter by
society. - The corporation is a common good.
- Companies benefit from many public goods, and
thus owe the public in return. Corporations
are trustees of societys resources.
10Douglas S. Sherwin (1983) said At its core,
business is a feedback system . . . What is
ofttimes not appreciated, even by the members
themselves, is that the systems members are
interdependent emphasis his. . . What each
member receives is constrained by what other
members require, and no member can in the long
run enjoy a disproportionate share.
Sherwin, D. The ethical roots of the business
system. Harvard Business Review, 61(6), Nov/Dec
1983, 183-192.
11The Center for Corporate Citizenship at Boston
College
http//www.bcccc.net/
12Business Ethics Magazine Top 100Spring, 2006
Source Business Ethics Magazine Online. 100
Best Corporate Citizens for 2006, accessed
10/31/2006, (http//www.business-ethics.com/whats_
new/100best.html).
13Corporate Philanthropy
- Donations
- Volunteer initiatives
- Community service
- Educational or cultural projects
14Four Types of Corporate Philanthropy
Source Bruch, H. and Walter, F. The Keys to
Rethinking Corporate Philanthropy. MIT Sloan
Management Review, 47(1), Fall 2005, p. 51.
15HRs Leadership Role in CSR
- Include CSR in the HR Management System
- Create a strong organizational culture.
- Scan the environmentidentify threats.
- Expand intellectual capital.
- Include ethical concerns in staff performance
measures. - Support participative decision-making.
- Ensure highest standards in workplace health and
safety. - Encourage active engagement in community
activities. - Continue HRs Role as a Change Agent
Source Lockwood, N. Corporate Social
Responsibility HRs Leadership Role. SHRM
Knowledge Center, (http//www.shrm.org/research/q
uarterly/1204RQuart_essay.asp), accessed
10/31/2006.
16References Bruch, H. and Walter, F. The Keys to
Rethinking Corporate Philanthropy. MIT Sloan
Management Review, 47(1), Fall 2005,
49-55. Business Ethics Magazine Online. 100 Best
Corporate Citizens for 2006, (http//www.business-
ethics.com/whats_new/100best.html), accessed
10/31/2006. Carroll, Archie B. The pyramid of
corporate social responsibility Toward the
moral management of organizational stakeholders.
Business Horizons, 34(4), July-August 1991,
39-50. The Center for Corporate Citizenship at
Boston College, (http//www.bcccc.net). Lawrence,
A.T., Weber, J. and Post, J.E. Business and
Society, 11th ed., McGraw-Hill/Irwin,
2005. Lockwood, N. Corporate Social
Responsibility HRs Leadership Role. SHRM
Knowledge Center, accessed 10/31/2006,
(http//www.shrm.org/research/quarterly/1204RQuart
_essay.asp). Matten, D., Crane, A., and Chapple,
W. Behind the mask Revealing the true face of
corporate citizenship. Journal of Business
Ethics, 45(1), June 2003, 109-. Provides a
discussion of the evolution of the CC concept
from a theoretical perspective. Sherwin, D. The
ethical roots of the business system. Harvard
Business Review, 61(6), Nov/Dec 1983,
183-192. Starling, G. The Changing Environment of
Business, 4th ed. South-Western College
Publishing (Thomson), 1996.