Corporate Citizenship

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Corporate Citizenship

9781843762386 Edward Elgar Publishing
Edited by Dirk Matten, Professor of Strategy and Hewlett-Packard Chair in Corporate Social Responsibility, York University, Canada and Jeremy Moon, Professor of Corporate Social Responsibility, Nottingham University Business School, UK
Publication Date: February 2014 ISBN: 978 1 84376 238 6 Extent: 832 pp
Corporate Citizenship (CC) has emerged as a widely used way of describing the role of business in wider society. As such, CC has been popular with academics, business leaders and politicians alike, as it locates the private corporation within a network of mutual responsibilities and obligations in their social environment. This collection takes stock of the debate by tracing back its origin, identifying the key topics and delineating the key controversies. The volume places the discussion on corporate citizenship in a political context within the wider debate on the role of business in society. In doing so, the individual chapters feature major contributions by the leading scholars in this area and provide an overview of ongoing developments, in particular at the transnational level.

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Corporate Citizenship (CC) has emerged as a widely used way of describing the role of business in wider society. As such, CC has been popular with academics, business leaders and politicians alike, as it locates the private corporation within a network of mutual responsibilities and obligations in their social environment. This collection takes stock of the debate by tracing back its origin, identifying the key topics and delineating the key controversies. The volume places the discussion on corporate citizenship in a political context within the wider debate on the role of business in society. In doing so, the individual chapters feature major contributions by the leading scholars in this area and provide an overview of ongoing developments, in particular at the transnational level.

With an original introduction by the editors, this collection will be an invaluable tool for students, researchers and practitioners with an interest in the field of corporate citizenship.
Contributors
32 articles, dating from 1973 to 2012
Contributors: S. Barley, A. Crane, D. Detomasi, H. Elms, E. Epstein, D. Levy, P. Néron, D. Ostas, J. Ruggie, D. Vogel
Contents
Contents:

Acknowledgements

Introduction Dirk Matten and Jeremy Moon

PART I ORIGINS
1. Donna J. Wood and Jeanne M. Logsdon (2001), ‘Theorising Business Citizenship’
2. Andrew Crane, Dirk Matten and Jeremy Moon (2008), ‘Corporations as Citizens’
3. Andrew Crane, Dirk Matten and Jeremy Moon (2008), ‘Corporations as Governments’
4. Pierre-Yves Néron and Wayne Norman (2008), ‘Citizenship, Inc.: Do We Really Want Businesses to be Good Corporate Citizens?’

PART II DEVELOPING LINKS BETWEEN CITIZENSHIP/POLITICS AND BUSINESS
5. David J. Vogel (1996), ‘The Study of Business and Politics’
6. Edwin M. Epstein (1973), ‘Dimensions of Corporate Power, 1’
7. Edwin M. Epstein (1974), ‘Dimensions of Corporate Power, 2’
8. Jeremy Moon (2002), ‘The Social Responsibility of Business and New Governance’
9. Engin F. Isin and Bryan S. Turner (2007), ‘Investigating Citizenship: An Agenda for Citizenship Studies’
10. Andreas Georg Scherer and Guido Palazzo (2007), ‘Toward a Political Conception of Corporate Responsibility: Business and Society Seen from a Habermasian Perspective’
11. David Anthony Detomasi (2008), ‘The Political Roots of Corporate Social Responsibility’
12. Colin Crouch (2011), ‘From Corporate Political Entanglement to Corporate Social Responsibility’
13. Pierre-Yves Néron (2010), ‘Business and the Polis: What Does it Mean to See Corporations as Political Actors?’
14. John R. Boatright (2011), ‘The Implications of the New Governance for Corporate Governance’
15. David Sadler and Stuart Lloyd (2009), ‘Neo-liberalising Corporate Social Responsibility: A Political Economy of Corporate Citizenship’
16. Doreen McBarnet (2007), ‘Corporate Social Responsibility beyond Law, through the Law, for the Law: The New Corporate Accountability’
17. Timothy L. Fort (1996), ‘Business as Mediating Institution’

PART III CITIZENSHIP AND THE PRIVATE CORPORATION AT THE NATION STATE LEVEL
18. Steven Gerencser (2005), ‘The Corporate Person and Democratic Politics’
19. Stephen R. Barley (2010), ‘Building an Institutional Field to Corral a Government: A Case to Set an Agenda for Organization Studies’
20. Saku Mantere, Kalle Pajunen and Juha-Antti Lamberg (2009), ‘Vices and Virtues of Corporate Political Activity: The Challenge of International Business’
21. Oscar Molina and Martin Rhodes (2002), ‘Corporatism: The Past, Present, and Future of a Concept’
22. Maria Gjølberg (2009), ‘The Origin of Corporate Social Responsibility: Global Forces or National Legacies’
23. Daniel T. Ostas (2007), ‘The Law and Ethics of K Street: Lobbying, the First Amendment, and the Duty to Create Just Laws’
24. David Coen (1999), ‘The Impact of U.S. Lobbying Practice on the European Business-Government Relationship’
25. Heather Elms and Robert A. Phillips (2009), ‘Private Security Companies and Institutional Legitimacy: Corporate and Stakeholder Responsibility’

PART IV CITIZENSHIP AND THE PRIVATE CORPORATION AT THE TRANSNATIONAL LEVEL
26. John Gerard Ruggie (2004), ‘Reconstituting the Global Public Domain - Issues, Actors, and Practices’
27. Doris Fuchs (2005), ‘Commanding Heights? The Strength and Fragility of Business Power in Global Politics’
28. Andreas Georg Scherer and Guido Palazzo (2011), ‘The New Political Role of Business in a Globalized World: A Review of a New Perspective on CSR and its Implications for the Firm, Governance, and Democracy’
29. Stephen J. Kobrin (2009), ‘Private Political Authority and Public Responsibility: Transnational Politics, Transnational Firms and Human Rights’
30. Nien-hê Hsieh (2009), ‘Does Global Business Have a Responsibility to Promote Just Institutions?’
31. David L. Levy and Daniel Egan (2000), ‘Corporate Political Action in the Global Polity: National and Transnational Strategies in the Climate Change Negotiations’
32. Oren Perez (2011), ‘Private Environmental Governance as Ensemble Regulation: A Critical Exploration of Sustainability Indexes and the New Ensemble Politics’
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