Responsabilité sociétale et développement durable

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Business Ethics as a Field of Training, Teaching and Research in Europe

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Abstract  
In this survey of business ethics in Europe, we compare the present state of business ethics in Europe with the situation as described by Enderle (BEER 5(1):33–46, 1996). At that time, business ethics was still dominated by a mainly philosophical, normative analysis of business issues with a maximum of 25 chairs in business ethics all over Europe. It has since expanded dramatically in numbers as well as diversified into many different domains. We find this rich diversity in the conception of business ethics back in the answers of our respondents to every single question. The concepts they propose, the courses they teach, the subjects under research as well as the training and consultancy offered to clients and even the challenges for the future all reflect this diversity. Decisive for the expansion of business ethics in Europe has been the advance of CSR and the official backing of CSR by the European Commission. We further argue that the prevalence and importance of business ethics and CSR differs throughout Europe. A rough approximation based on our survey results and literature review is that it is more important and more developed in core and Nordic European countries and somewhat less in Southern and Eastern European countries. The real East with countries like Belarus and Bulgaria remains a challenge.

  • Content Type Journal Article
  • Pages 1-13
  • DOI 10.1007/s10551-012-1260-3
  • Authors
    • Luc Van Liedekerke, Center for Economics and Ethics, KULeuven, Leuven, Belgium
    • Geert Demuijnck, EDHEC Business School, Lille, France

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Assessing the Accountability of the Benefit Corporation: Will This New Gray Sector Organization Enhance Corporate Social Responsibility?

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Abstract  
In recent years the benefit corporation has emerged as a new organizational form dedicated to legitimizing the pursuit of corporate social responsibility (CSR). Eschewing traditional governmental authority, the benefit corporation derives its moral legitimacy from the values of its owners and the oversight of a third party evaluator. This research identifies the benefit corporation as a new type of gray sector organization (GSO) and applies extant theory on GSOs to analyze its design. In particular, it shows how the theory of GSO accountability can be used to assess the potential of benefit corporations for enhancing CSR. This research first examines the statutes that have established benefit corporations in five states in the US, along with bills in other states, to show how legislation defines their specific public benefits and holds them accountable for delivering these benefits. It then compares the accountability of the benefit corporation with that of other corporate-centric GSOs, e.g., GSOs that closely resemble traditional corporations. It concludes with significant design-based concerns about the utility of the benefit corporation as an effective organization for implementing CSR.

  • Content Type Journal Article
  • Pages 1-18
  • DOI 10.1007/s10551-012-1254-1
  • Authors
    • Rae André, College of Business Administration, Northeastern University, 112 Hayden Hall, 360 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02115, USA

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Sustainability ‘Wars’ in a New England Town

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Publication year: 2012
Source:Futures

Elizabeth L. Krause, Anurag Sharma

A research project into large group decision-making in a New England Town Meeting surprised us with the degree to which sustainability came to be the axis around which political debate revolved. We identified two very different yet overlapping conceptions of sustainability: one emphasized fiscal responsibility; the other asserted the merits of environmental stewardship. Each of the two conceptions had proponents, with strong views about what constituted good versus bad governing practices, each with a strong sense of what was good for the town. In this paper, we sort out those meanings. We seek to understand and expose the contours of sustainability, how the discourses around sustainability enter political processes, and to shed light on ongoing debates about the form of governance best suited for a democratically inclined New England town Methods involved both quantitative and qualitative approaches, including data collection and analysis activities that comprised four levels: 1) participant observation of the Town Meeting; 2) quantitative analysis of voting behaviors; 3) interviews with 30 of the 240 members of the Town Meeting; and 4) thematic analysis, codebook development, and coding. Finally, in the spirit of contributing to the making of a future possible world, the authors ponder the courses forward for democratic processes and the future of a town caught in ‘pitching battle’ over the terms and stakes of sustainability





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AMR: EMBEDDING RECIPROCAL RELATIONSHIPS INTO ROLES: THE RELATIONAL BUREAUCRATIC FORM [Volume 37, Number 4 October 2012]

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We describe a hybrid organizational form whose structures embed three processes of reciprocal interrelating – relational coproduction, relational coordination and relational leadership – into the roles of customers, workers and managers, each based on shared goals, shared knowledge and mutual respect. We show how these role-based relationships foster attentiveness to the situation and to one another, enabling the caring, timely and knowledgeable responses found in the relational form, along with the scalability, replicability and sustainability found in the bureaucratic form. Through these role-based relationships, relational bureaucracy promotes universalistic norms of caring for particular others.

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