Here,
the voluntary and discretionary expenditures of business on social and
environmental projects are seen to be more closely aligned with corporate risk
management and reputation-building than with corporate strategy. After some
observations about terminology and philosophical attitudes, the paper notes the
growing pressure on business to undertake discretionary social and
environmental expenditures and to account publicly for such activities through
institutionalized annual reporting. Some recent international initiatives to
foster and popularize corporate social responsibility are summarized and their
features briefly assessed, as is one attempt to measure corporate social
responsibility. The paper seeks to illuminate the 'hidden' issues in this
increasingly popular contemporary movement. The most important of these are to
identify who ultimately pays for such expenditures and who ultimately makes
decisions about them. At the same time it is noted that the capabilities of
private business in the social arena may sometimes exceed those of government.
The paper concludes with a number of judgements about the nature and legitimacy
of this contemporary development and also about its future.
Website: http://www.arjonline.org/business-and-management/american-research-journal-of-business-and-management/
Website: http://www.arjonline.org/business-and-management/american-research-journal-of-business-and-management/
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