Title: Cecilia Chirieleison University of Perugia
1Cecilia ChirieleisonUniversity of Perugia
- NGOs and CSR
- which strategies to become critical stakeholders?
Cecilia Chirieleison University of Perugia
Corporate and Stakeholder Responsibility. Theory
and Practice Milan, 22-23 May 2008
2NGOs and CSR which strategies to become
critical stakeholders?
- Growing interest of NGOs for the business
attempt to improve environmental and social
context by influencing the level of CSR - In the perspective of the stakeholder theory, are
NGOs able to be critical stakeholders? - Mitchell et al. (1997) legitimacy , urgency and
power - NGOs often dont have the power to directly
influence the firms financial and competitive
performance - The indirect strategies (Frooman, 1999) NGOs
acting through an ally that can threaten to
withhold its resources - Traditionally two main stakeholders targeted the
national government and the consumers
Cecilia Chirieleison University of Perugia
Corporate and Stakeholder Responsibility. Theory
and Practice Milan, 22-23 May 2008
3NGOs and CSR which strategies to become
critical stakeholders?
- The government
- Different objectives of the NGOs lobbying
activities - Enforceable national and international legal
obligation directly imposing social standards or
disclosure to the corporations - Regulation indirectly persuading the corporation
to adopt higher CSR standards strengthening or
influencing other stakeholders (unions, consumers
associations, institutional investors, etc.) - In general NGOs are quite weak in influencing the
public policies - Governments action tend to be less effective
because of globalization - The MNCs escape both the international e the
national law - The consumers
- Documentation of abuses and moral shaming are
useful only if they really influence consumers
behaviour - Consumers action has demonstrated to be often
too weak - Consumers are in general not very interested and
informed about CSR and have a short memory - Only few successful boycotts
Cecilia Chirieleison University of Perugia
Corporate and Stakeholder Responsibility. Theory
and Practice Milan, 22-23 May 2008
4NGOs and CSR which strategies to become
critical stakeholders?
- Emerging influencing strategies. In search of
others stakeholders-allies shareholders and
executives - The shareholders they own an essential resource
and can choose the exit option - Different tactics used
- Shareholder activism (NGOs become shareholders)
- Partnership whit SRI collaboration in social and
ethical screening - Persuasion of traditional institutional investors
to adopt a social screening by emphasizing
financial risks associated with social and
environmental poor performance
Cecilia Chirieleison University of Perugia
Corporate and Stakeholder Responsibility. Theory
and Practice Milan, 22-23 May 2008
5NGOs and CSR which strategies to become
critical stakeholders?
- The executives from confrontational strategies
to engaging and collaborative strategies - Support in voluntary CSR and advocacy of social
accounting and independent verification schemes
versus self-compliance - From the CRM to the cooperation in dealing with
firms specific social and environmental issues - The collaboration between NGOs and business in
defining higher standard in case of absence or
insufficient regulation of global social issues
versus a civil regulation (the Forest
Stewardship Council) - Engagement NGOs need the confrontational ones
demonstrating to be able (even in a few cases) to
damage the corporate reputation and the brand
name (CorpWatch) - The interaction with the mass-media visibility
only for few big NGOs
Cecilia Chirieleison University of Perugia
Corporate and Stakeholder Responsibility. Theory
and Practice Milan, 22-23 May 2008
6NGOs and CSR which strategies to become
critical stakeholders?
- The effectiveness of the NGOs strategies and the
core resources funds, legitimacy and information - Fund rising and dimensions growth the ability
to intervene on global issues requires global
dimensions - Private and public donors
- The risk of conflicting interests when engaging
with the business (NGOs selling legitimacy for
subsidizing greenwash and bluewash) - The public subsidizing and the autonomy in
defining objectives and ways of intervention - Trade-off between dimensional growth and
maintenance of independency? - In search of new instruments to protect
independency (Charity SRI donor and partner
screening) - The maintenance of the legitimacy
- The legitimacy of the claims a cost/benefit
evaluation (i.e. child labor vs. prostitution) - The cultural legitimacy the ethical hegemony of
the Northern NGOs - The internal legitimacy the need for improving
governance and democracy (which accountability
for the NGOs? Who is the principal?) - The legitimacy of the reputation the violent
no-global movement
Cecilia Chirieleison University of Perugia
Corporate and Stakeholder Responsibility. Theory
and Practice Milan, 22-23 May 2008
7NGOs and CSR which strategies to become
critical stakeholders?
- The information as strategic resource the
influence on the stakeholders-allies depends on
the ability to obtain, process and diffuse
information - Obtaining information
- The ability to understand the corporate social
disclosure - The ability to show double standards and to
obtain information about the MNCs operations in
the developing countries the role of the
Southern NGOs and the transnational networks - Processing information
- The screening to verify informations reliability
- The NGOs reputation depends on the quality and
the trustworthiness of the information they
provide - The reputation of the partners for the
reliability of the information - The importance of the relationship with an
international scientific network - Combining pieces of information to turn them in a
global message - Diffusing information
- Only few and well known NGOs can access the mass
media to obtain a global resonance - To carry information to the others stakeholders
Cecilia Chirieleison University of Perugia
Corporate and Stakeholder Responsibility. Theory
and Practice Milan, 22-23 May 2008
8NGOs and CSR which strategies to become
critical stakeholders?
- The needs to develop new competences to engage
with shareholders, executives and others NGOs - Competences in processing accurate information in
a global context and in communicating with mass
media and other stakeholders - Competences in scientific fields to engage with
scientists - Competences in finance and in CSP measurement to
engage with shareholders - Competences in management to engage with
executives - Competences to improve NGOs governance and
accountability - Competences in promoting and managing
transnational networks between NGOs (specially
Northern and Southern) and with other private and
public actors - How to develop new competences without loosing
ethical value (professionals or volunteers?)
Cecilia Chirieleison University of Perugia
Corporate and Stakeholder Responsibility. Theory
and Practice Milan, 22-23 May 2008