Title: Session 3 Societal Context
1Session 3 Societal Context Labour Context
- What is the importance of corporate social
responsibility (CSR)? -
-
2WHAT IS BUSINESS SOCIETY?
- Business private, commercially oriented
organizations - Society a community/national or group of people
with common values, traditions, institutions,
activities interests
Community
Government
Business
Owners
Employees
Consumers
3THE BUSINESS-SOCIETY RELATIONSHIP
- Assuming a relationship between business and
society connects to notions of embeddedness and
organizations as open systems
4 SHOULD BUSINESS HAVE ANY RESPONSIBILITIES TO
SOCIETY? AND IF SO, WHAT IS THE NATURE OF THOSE
REPSONSIBILITIES?
5 CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
CSR is The obligation of decision makers to
take actions which protect and improve the
welfare of society as a whole along with their
own interests. IE.
6 Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
- obligations that involve going beyond
- the production of goods/services at a profit
- the requirement of competition, law or custom
7 To create policies, make decisions engage
in actions that are desirable in terms of
the values objectives of society. i.e.
ethical responsibilities to society
Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
8BUSINESS SOCIETY CONTEMPORARY CONCERNS
- Business helping society
- Example Levis
9THE ROLE OF BUSINESS IN SOCIETY CORPORATE SOCIAL
RESPONSIBILITY
- Examples of CSR
- 3M health of employees
- Merck Pharmaceutical River Blindness
- Can you think of examples of companies that have
recently demonstrated CSR?
10THE ROLE OF BUSINESS IN SOCIETY CORPORATE SOCIAL
RESPONSIBILITY
- The social responsibility of business encompasses
the economic, legal, ethical and discretionary
(philanthropic) expectations that society has of
organizations at a given point in time (Carroll,
1979). - A PYRAMID OF RESPONSIBILITIES!
11THE CSR PYRAMID
(Adapted from Karakowsky, Carroll, Bucholtz, 2007)
12THE CSR PYRAMID
- Components can be interdependent rather than
mutually exclusive. - e.g., serving ethical responsibilities does not
necessarily mean that profit (economic
responsibilities) will be sacrificed or vice
versa.
13THE CSR PYRAMID
- However, there may also be tensions between the
components -
- e.g., profits versus ethics.
14THE CSR PYRAMID
- Our discussion of this pyramid has already
implied that business is responsible to more than
simply its owners or shareholders! - Rather there exists a network of STAKEHOLDERS FOR
WHICH THESE REPSONSIBILITIES EXITS - What or who are the stakeholders of business?
Find out in our next module!
15THE STAKEHOLDERS OF BUSINESS
16STAKEHOLDERS, BUSINESS SOCIETY
- WHAT IS A STAKE?
- An Interest or share in an activity
- A Right - a legal right e.g. to fair treatment or
a moral right, e.g. to expect satisfactory
service - Ownership a legal title to an asset/ property
17STAKEHOLDERS, BUSINESS SOCIETY
- A stakeholder is any individual or group who can
affect or is affected by the actions, decisions,
policies, practices or goals of the organization
18STAKEHOLDER VIEW OF THE FIRM Primary Secondary
Stakeholders
Employees
Suppliers etc
Soc. Pressure Groups
Media Academics
Local Communities
F I R M
Government Regulators
Competitors
Trade Bodies
Shareholders/ owners etc
Customers/ consumers
Adapted from KCB, 2007
19Should business have some kind of moral
obligation to society? Is CSR a desirable
goal?
20DEBATING CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
AGAINST CSR FOR CSR
Sole responsibility of business is to make a profit Business should conform to social rules
Business is not equipped to manage CSR Business talent, capital expertise could ensure CSR
Business has enough power shouldnt dictate morality Could use its power for CSR, i.e. using its power positively
Costs of CSR would be passed on to consumers limit national competitiveness CSR provides long term benefits by enhancing business environment
OTHER ARGUMENTS?
21THE LABOUR CONTEXT
- EMPLOYEES ARE IMPORTANT STAKEHOLDERS IN ANY
BUSINESS. - WHAT OBLIGATIONS DOES BUSINESS HAVE TOWARD
LABOUR? - HOW DO UNIONS HELP ADDRES
- LABOUR ISSUES?
22THE EMPLOYEE STAKEHOLDER
- EMPLOYEE RIGHTS
- Guarantees of fair treatment in the workplace
- granted by courts, legislatures or employers.
- Provide workers with
- Desired outcomes
- Protection from unwanted outcomes
23Aboriginals
Women
DESIGNATED EMPLOYEE GROUPS
Visible minorities
Persons with Disabilities
24WOMEN
- Segregated
- Lower status occupations
- Under-representation in many areas
- Career barriers
- Gender-stereotyping
25First Nations/Aboriginals
- Vastly underrepresented in the workforce
- Education employment gaps
- Educational, geographical and perceptual barriers
26INDIVIDUALS WITH DISABILITIES
- Higher unemployment rate compared to national
average - Access, physical and attitudinal barriers
- Economic barriers and social discrimination
27VISIBLE MINORITIES
- Account for most of the growth in the labour
force - Barriers include cultural difference issues,
foreign credential issues, language issues - Highest unemployment rates
28THE EMPLOYEE STAKEHOLDER
- PROTECTING EMPLOYEE RIGHTS
- The Case of Women, Aboriginal people, people
with disabilities, members of visible minorities - Legal Protection Against Discrimination
- Canadian Charter of Rights Freedoms
- The Canadian Human Rights Act
29THE EMPLOYEE STAKEHOLDER
- EMPLOYMENT EQUITY
- Treating people fairly by recognizing
- individual differences
- treating people fairly by recognizing that
different individuals and groups require
different measures to ensure fair and comparable
results -
30THE EMPLOYEE STAKEHOLDER
- EMPLOYMENT EQUITY
- Deal with systemic discrimination inequality
at work
31THE EMPLOYEE STAKEHOLDER
- EMPLOYMENT EQUITY
- Eliminates employment barriers for specified
groups
32THE EMPLOYEE STAKEHOLDER
- EMPLOYMENT EQUITY
- Redresses past discrimination
33THE EMPLOYEE STAKEHOLDER
- EMPLOYMENT EQUITY
- Improve access and foster equity
34UNIONS
- Unions are the organizations most directly
responsible for representing the interests of
Canadian working people. - - workers associations formed to enhance their
power in dealings with employees
35Union membership
- Why have unions membership rates fallen?
- Manufacturing decline
- Part time work
- Focus on public sector
36UNION ACTIONS
- The mutual insurance function of unions
- Collective bargaining
- Legal enactment
37COLLECTIVE BARGAINING
- Negotiated outcomes
- Increasing issues reflect increasing diversity of
workforce
38Political action and expanded scope
- Social unionism
- - economic development, human and labour rights
overseas
39UNION IMPACTS
- Impact on productivity
- Impact on management
- Impact on society
40ARE UNIONS STILL NEEDED?
- What would society look like without unions?
- Workplace representation
- -balancing interests of big business with labour
interests
41KEY LEARNING POINTS
- CSR Responsibilities extend beyond
- just those to the owners or
- Shareholders of the business
- Stakeholders
- CSR Debate
- Labour context/employee Stakeholder
- Designated employee groups
- Labour unions