A recent conceptualisation of corporate citizenship by Matten and Crane (2005) shifts focus onto the corporation's role in providing individuals with the rights they are entitled to as citizens. This expanded corporate role is depicted as filling an institutional vacuum resulting from the withdrawal of the state. Marking an innovation to the corporate citizenship literature, we devise a three-part analytical framework from political institutionalism to question the concept's ideological and empirical groundings. Incorporating a constrained game theory perspective, we use an example of the provision of Western corporate services by low-labour-cost nation-states to argue that the concept as strategy would in some circumstances exacerbate the ...
This article addresses the rise of corporate citizenship in the context of the changes in the nature...
Confronted with increasing pressures to limit government spending on social welfare, more and more p...
Confronted with increasing pressures to limit government spending on social welfare, more and more p...
A recent conceptualisation of corporate citizenship by Matten and Crane (2005) shifts focus onto the...
A recent conceptualisation of corporate citizenship by Matten and Crane (2005) shifts focus onto the...
Recent discussions on corporate citizenship (CC) highlight the new political role of corporations in...
Recent discussions on corporate citizenship (CC) highlight the new political role of corporations in...
The objective of this thesis is to critically examine the concept of corporate citizenship and its i...
Exploring the concept of citizenship from the history of political philosophy provides suggestions a...
This paper traces the development of corporate citizenship as a way of framing business and society ...
Management scholars have been studying relations between business and society since the 1950s. Under...
Why are companies increasingly adopting the language of 'citizenship' to describe themselves? This i...
This article investigates the relationship between corporate social responsibility and a phrase that...
This paper provides an analysis of the current stakes in global corporate citizenship. It defines th...
Previous research based on the concept of corporate citizenship (CC) has shown that its practice has...
This article addresses the rise of corporate citizenship in the context of the changes in the nature...
Confronted with increasing pressures to limit government spending on social welfare, more and more p...
Confronted with increasing pressures to limit government spending on social welfare, more and more p...
A recent conceptualisation of corporate citizenship by Matten and Crane (2005) shifts focus onto the...
A recent conceptualisation of corporate citizenship by Matten and Crane (2005) shifts focus onto the...
Recent discussions on corporate citizenship (CC) highlight the new political role of corporations in...
Recent discussions on corporate citizenship (CC) highlight the new political role of corporations in...
The objective of this thesis is to critically examine the concept of corporate citizenship and its i...
Exploring the concept of citizenship from the history of political philosophy provides suggestions a...
This paper traces the development of corporate citizenship as a way of framing business and society ...
Management scholars have been studying relations between business and society since the 1950s. Under...
Why are companies increasingly adopting the language of 'citizenship' to describe themselves? This i...
This article investigates the relationship between corporate social responsibility and a phrase that...
This paper provides an analysis of the current stakes in global corporate citizenship. It defines th...
Previous research based on the concept of corporate citizenship (CC) has shown that its practice has...
This article addresses the rise of corporate citizenship in the context of the changes in the nature...
Confronted with increasing pressures to limit government spending on social welfare, more and more p...
Confronted with increasing pressures to limit government spending on social welfare, more and more p...