1st Edition

The World Guide to CSR A Country-by-Country Analysis of Corporate Sustainability and Responsibility

Edited By Wayne Visser, Nick Tolhurst Copyright 2010
    480 Pages
    by Routledge

    480 Pages
    by Routledge

    The World Guide to CSR is the first book to provide comparable national profiles that describe the evolution and practice of Corporate Sustainability and Responsibility (CSR) for 58 countries and 5 global regions. Each regional and national profile includes key information about the relevant CSR history, country-specific issues, trends, research and leading organizations.  The purpose of the book is to give CSR professionals (including managers, consultants, academics and NGOs focusing on the social, environmental and ethical responsibilities of business) a quick reference guide to CSR in different regional and national contexts. The need for the book is premised on the fact that CSR professionals and researchers more often than not have a multinational remit and are required to benchmark performance internationally, but find that country-specific CSR information is ad hoc, limited or non-existent. Even where national CSR research exists, it is often hidden in academic journals that practitioners cannot access or do not have the time or inclination to read.  The book is an edited volume, with expert contributors from around the world, all of whom have been screened and selected on the basis of their qualifications and experience in CSR. Each regional/country profile includes the following subsections:CSR in context Priority issues Trends Legislation and codes Organizations Case studies Educational institutions References  This unique resource will be an essential acquisition for all organisations who need to benchmark their CSR strategies throughout different regions and cultures and want the best possible intelligence on the key issues and concerns relating to corporate social responsibility in all of the markets in which they operate.

    A. REGIONAL PROFILES I. Africa Ullrich Klins, Jurie H. Van Niekerk and Arnold Smit  II Asia Felipe B. Alfonso, Maria Elena B. Herrera and Francisco L. Roman  III Europe Laura Maanavilja  IV Latin America Estrella Peinado-Vara and Antonio Vives  V Middle East Abbe Le Pelley  B. COUNTRY PROFILES 1 Argentina María Irigoyen  2 Armenia Nazareth Seferian  3 Australia Leeora D. Black  4 Austria Alice Schmidt  5 Azerbaijan Ahad Kazimov  6 Bangladesh Niaz Alam  7 Brazil Camila Yamahaki and Tarcila Reis Ursini  8 Bulgaria Deyana Marcheva and Nadejda Loumbeva  9 Canada Dermot Hikisch  10 China Sam Yoon-Suk Lee and Joshua Wickerham  11 Colombia Angela Pinilla Urzola  12 Côte d’Ivoire Ulf Richter  13 Denmark Tania Ellis and Jonas Eder-Hansen  14 Finland Arno Kourula  15 Germany Nick Tolhurst and Aron Embaye  16 Ghana Daniel F. Ofori  17 Greece Kiara Konti  18 Hungary Attila Kun  19 Iceland Hanna Thorsteinsdottir  20 India Bimal Arora and Aparna Mahajan  21 Indonesia Yanuar Nugroho, Jimmy Tanaya, Theresia Widiyanti and Adhitya Hadi Permana  22 Iran Alireza Omidvar  23 Ireland Tomás Sercovich  24 Israel Ivri Verbin and Dena Freeman  25 Japan Luke Poliszcuk and Motoko Sakashita  26 Jordan Dima Abdeljalil Maaytah  27 Kenya Judy N. Muthuri and Kiarie Mwaura  28 Liberia Marcus S. Wleh  29 Malaysia Roger Haw Boon Hong  30 Mauritius Renginee G. Pillay  31 Mexico Leonardo J. Cárdenas  32 The Netherlands Jennifer Iansen-Rogers  33 Nigeria Kenneth Amaeshi and Chris Ogbechie  34 Norway Inge Aarhus  35 Pakistan Khadeeja Ashaah Balkhi  36 Peru Cristian Loza Adaui  37 The Philippines Francisco L. Roman and Maria Elena B. Herrera  38 Poland Liliana Anam  39 Portugal Maria Lemos  40 Romania Rodica Milena Zaharia, Alin Stancu and Liviu Chelcea  41 Russia Alexey Kostin  42 Saudi Arabia Tareq Emtairah  43 Senegal Oumhany Sy  44 Sierra Leone Nicole Porto  45 Singapore Thomas Thomas  46 South Africa Mervyn E. King, Derick de Jongh and René Carapinha  47 South Korea Angela Joo-Hyun Kang and Sam Yoon-Suk Lee  48 Spain José Manuel Almela Burgos, Germán Granda Revilla and Ricardo Trujillo Fernández  49 Sri Lanka Lalith Gunaratne and Ravi Fernando  50 Switzerland Heiko Spitzeck  51 Tanzania Sarah Lauwo  52 Thailand Alex P. Mavro Jr  53 Turkey Dixie O’Donnell  54 Uganda Cedric Marvin Nkiko and David Katamba  55 United Arab Emirates Aparna Mahajan  56 United Kingdom David Grayson CBE  57 United States of America Audra Jones  58 Venezuela Perla Puterman Szomstein

    Biography

    Wayne Visser, Nick Tolhurst

    ... wherever you are in the world, the World Guide to CSR will prime you on what is most important to know about CSR. ... The impressive list of contributors to this volume, 87 in all, are the crème de la crème of CSR knowledge and include leading academics, business people and practitioners from all over the global village. The country profiles are of a exceedingly high quality ... The profiles are superbly edited to give consistency of scope and depth, country by country. ... Why is this book useful? It serves as a start-point for any study of CSR anywhere in the world, as each profile contains an impressive list of links and references. It is a learning aid because the local case studies provide outlines of the key CSR activities by key corporates – the leading edge of CSR around the world. It serves as a guide for those wanting to develop their own CSR programs. Read the full review - CSRwire, 17 August 2010 - Elaine Cohen

    This book offers a very useful, quick to access, reference guide for the differing approaches to corporate social responsibility (CSR) found around the world. The consistent formatting of the book lends itself to easy readability, with easily accessible quick "takeaway lessons" by country. However, this can also be a shortcoming as one could argue this runs the risk of feeding the reader (who is likely to be a practitioner looking for a quick solution) with an oversimplifications of CSR in the form of overly high level generalizations. CSR is inherently complex, and inherently cultural. This book takes a step in the right direction in acknowledging there are many differing approaches to CSR, and it does so in an interesting way that will hopefully help to encourage industry to engage with and be a bit more sensitive to the differing needs of stakeholders across the planet. It will perhaps help to support Wayne Visser's call at the conclusion of his foreword to "make sure that business lives up to its potential as a force for good in the world." - Journal of Consumer Policy 33.4 (2010)