Stakeholder Approach to Corporate Social Responsibility: Pressures, Conflicts, and Reconciliation

A Stakeholder Approach to Corporate Social Responsibility: Pressures, Conflicts, and Reconciliation

By Philip Kotler and François Maon

According to a recent McKinsey & Co. global survey, 95% of surveyed CEOs believe that 'society has greater expectations than it did five years ago that companies will assume public responsibilities. ' In turn, corporate social responsibility has grown into a global phenomenon that encompasses businesses, consumers, governments, and civil society.

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Book Information

Publisher: Routledge
Publish Date: 06/28/2012
Pages: 464
ISBN-13: 9781409418399
ISBN-10: 1409418391
Language: English

Full Description

Corporate social responsibility has grown into a global phenomenon that encompasses businesses, consumers, governments, and civil society, and many organizations have adopted its discourse. Yet corporate social responsibility remains an uncertain and poorly defined ambition, with few absolutes. First, the issues that organizations must address can easily be interpreted to include virtually everyone and everything. Second, with their unique, often particular characteristics, different stakeholder groups tend to focus only on specific issues that they believe are the most appropriate and relevant in organizations' corporate social responsibility programs. Thus, beliefs about what constitutes a socially responsible and sustainable organization depend on the perspective of the stakeholder. Third, in any organization, the beliefs of organizational members about their organization's social responsibilities vary according to their function and department, as well as their own managerial fields of knowledge. A Stakeholder Approach to Corporate Social Responsibility provides a comprehensive collection of cutting-edge theories and research that can lead to a more multifaceted understanding of corporate social responsibility in its various forms, the pressures and conflicts that result from these different understandings, and some potential solutions for reconciling them.

About the Authors

Philip Kotler (M. A. , University of Chicago, Ph. D. , M. I. T. ) is the S. C. Johnson Distinguished Professor of International Marketing at the Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University.

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Dr Adam Lindgreen is Professor of Marketing at Cardiff Business School, with a Ph.D. from Cranfield University. He is widely published, in academic journals and books including Managing Market Relationships and A Stakeholder Approach to Corporate Social Responsibility. Dr

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