1st Edition

Business, Capitalism and Corporate Citizenship A Collection of Seminal Essays

Edited By Malcolm McIntosh Copyright 2015
    252 Pages
    by Routledge

    252 Pages
    by Routledge

    In the first decades of the twenty-first century, the theory and practice of corporate citizenship and responsibility adapted significantly. The pieces in this volume capture the essence of these changes, with illuminating reflections by their preeminent authors on success, failure, learning and progress. Featuring contributions from John Ruggie, Peter Senge, R. Edward Freeman, Jan Aart Scholte and Georg Kell, it charts the rise of corporate citizenship, sustainability and corporate social responsibility.

    This title is one of a two-volume set: a collection of seminal and thought-provoking essays, drawn from the Journal of Corporate Citizenship’s archive, accompanied by new analysis and reflection from the original authors. Written by some of the most widely recognized academic and business pioneers and leaders of the corporate responsibility and global sustainability movement, the volumes make essential reference texts for anyone interested in the radically awakening new global political economy.

    The Journal of Corporate Citizenship was launched in 2001 by Founding Editor Malcolm McIntosh and Greenleaf Publishing. Today, it continues to fulfil its mission to integrate theory and practice and provide a home for enlightened transdisciplinary thinking on the role of business and organizations in society.

    Acknowledgements

    Introduction Malcolm McIntosh

    Part 1: Business, capitalism and corporate citizenship  

    1. The role of business in the world of today David Henderson

    2. A positive programme for laissez-faire capitalism Walter Block and William Barnett

    3. Rejoinder to critics of laissez-faire capitalism Walter Block and William Barnett

    4. From hegemony to democracy Charles Derber

    5. Globalisation, governance and corporate citizenship Jan Aart Scholte

    6. Corporate social behaviour: between the rules of the game and the law of the jungle Esben Rahbek Pederson and Peter Neergard 

    Part 2: What do we talk about when we talk about corporate citizenship, and how do we talk about corporate citizenship when we talk about it?

    7. Are business schools silent partners in corporate crime?  Diane Swanson and Bill Frederick

    8. Can stakeholder theorists seize the moment?  Edward Freeman

    9. Corporate Social Responsibility: Quo Vadis? A critical inquiry into a discursive struggle Jan Jonker and Angela Marburg

    10. Is this OK? An exploration of extremes  Nick Barter and Luke Houghton

    11. "Working and fighting for progress, for prosperity, for society" Brave new business worlds before and beyond corporate citizenship  David Birch

    12. Fear and loathing in the JCC: Unleashing the monster of ‘new corporate citizenship theory’ to confront category crisis Andrew Crane and Dirk Matten

    13. The Transnational corporation and new corporate citizenship theory: A critical analysis  Marc T. Jones and Matthew Haigh 

    Part 3: Corporate citizenship engagement

    14. Waking the sleeping giant: Business as an agent for consumer understanding and responsible choice  Peter Senge

    15. Human security and sustainable enterprise in a developing-country context  Annie ChikwanhaCorporate citizenship engagement and the UN Global Compact

    16. The theory and practice of learning networks: Corporate social responsibility and the Global Compact  John Ruggie

    17. The Amnesty International UK business group: Putting human rights on the corporate agenda  Sir Geoffrey Chandler

    18. The Global Compact: Origins, operations, progress, challenges  Georg Kell

    19. What if we are failing? Towards a post-crisis compact for systemic change  Jem Bendell

    20. The human factor: Addressing United Nations staff perceptions of the business community when forming cross-sector partnerships Linda Merieau

    21. Making good business sense  Richard Holme and Phil Watts

    22. Business and Africa: Power, responsibility and values  Mark Moody-Stuart

    23. Business as a vocation  Mark Moody-Stuart  

    Biography

    Malcolm McIntosh