1st Edition
Corporate Social Responsibility, Accountability and Governance Global Perspectives
Edited By Istemi Demirag
Copyright 2005
378 Pages
by
Routledge
378 Pages
by
Routledge
Also available as eBook on:
The "business case" for corporate social responsibility, which suggests that socially and environmentally aware companies can expect to reap financial rewards, is seemingly gaining widespread acceptance within the business community. This is particularly apparent in the ever-increasing number of prominent companies parading their social, ethical and environmental credentials by producing paper-... Read more
ForewordProfessor David L. Owen, International Centre for Corporate Social Responsibility, Nottingham University Business SchoolIntroduction: Responsibility, accountability and governance: the presumed connections with the state, the market and the civil society and an overviewIstemi Demirag, Queen's University Belfast, UKPart 1: Emerging governance structures, risks and networking1. Broadening the notion of governance from the organisation to the domain: a study of municipal water systems in CanadaStephanie Bertels and Harrie Vredenburg, University of Calgary, Canada2. Regulation, responsibility and representation: challenges for intra-organisational communicationWolfgang Meyer, Saarland University, Germany3. Multi-stakeholder collaborative processes, regulation and governance: two Canadian case studiesMarie-France Turcotte and Corinne Gendron, Université du Québec à Montréal (UQÀM), Canada4. Levels of new governance from a corporate perspectiveArved Lüth, Stefan Schäfers and Constanze J. Helmchen, IFOK Institute for Organisational Communication, Germany5. A framework for examining accountability and value for money in the UK's Private Finance InitiativeIstemi Demirag, Melvin Dubnick and M. Iqbal Khadaroo, Queen's University Belfast, UK6. Risk regulation regimes in aviation: were the chips ever really down in the UK's management of Y2K?Kevin Quigley, Queen's University Belfast, UKPart 2: Corporate social responsibility and stakeholder theory7. Seeking global solutions for the common good: a new world order and corporate social responsibilityRobin T. Byerly, Appalachian State University, North Carolina, USA8. Toward better governance: the stakeholder partnership frameworkCraig E. Armstrong, University of Texas at San Antonio, USA9. Adding the stakeholder value: governance convergence in the private, public and not-for-profit sectorsAlison L. Dempsey, CanadaPart 3: Empirical studies on emerging governance structures and corporate social responsibility10. Governance via collective learning between corporate and public actorsRaimund Bleischwitz, Wuppertal Institute, Germany and College of Europe, Belgium, Kristian Snorre Andersen, Wuppertal Institute, Germany and Aarhus University, Denmark, and Michael Latsch, College of Europe, Belgium11. CSR in the Scandinavian countries: a review of voluntary versus regulatedEli Bleie Munkelien, DNV Research, Norway, Pia Rudolfsson Goyer, University of Oslo, Norway; co-author: Izabela Fratczak, Technical University of Lodz, Poland, and Turku Polytechnic, Finland12. Governance and management of protected areas in Canada and Mexico Angeles Mendoza Durán and Dixon Thompson, University of Calgary, Canada 13. Putting governance to work in a US company: the Carris experience Cecile G. Betit, independent researcher, USA 14. Networks for environmental management: involving public and quasi-public organisations for market development towards sustainability in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil José Antônio Puppim de Oliveira, Brazilian School of Public and Business Administration – EBAPE; Getulio Vargas Foundation – FGV, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Part 4: Corporate governance and its implications for regulators and civil society 15. Corporate governance models: international legal perspectives Zeljko Sevic, University of Greenwich, UK Read abstract 16. Conflicting and conflating interests in the regulation and governance of the financial markets in the United States Istemi Demirag and Justin O'Brien, Queen's University Belfast, UK 17. A systemic view of US government in market governance: lessons learned from the California electricity crisis Kimberly Samaha, AMP Consulting, France 18. Good governance and anti-corruption mobilisation: do Russian NGOs have any say? Diana Schmidt, Queen's University Belfast, UK, and Sergey Bondarenko, Centre for Applied Research on Intellectual Property, Russia 19. NGO–business collaborations and the law: sustainability, limitations of law, and the changing relationship between companies and NGOs Kees Bastmeijer and Jonathan Verschuuren, Tilburg University, the Netherlands Part 5: Multinational companies and their implications for the new governance structures, regulators and civil society 20. Strategic options for multinational corporate programmes in international corporate social responsibility Bryane Michael, University of Oxford, UK 21. Concluding remarks on emerging governance structures and practices: the state, the market and the voice of civil society Istemi Demirag, John Barry and Iqbal Khadaroo, Queen's University Belfast, UK
Biography
Istemi Demirag






