This Article deploys the sociological theory of social license, or the acceptance of a business or organization by the relevant communities and stakeholders, in the context of the board of directors and corporate governance. Corporations are generally treated as “private” actors and thus are regulated by “private” corporate law. This construct allows for considerable latitude. Corporate actors are not, however, solely “private.” They are the beneficiaries of economic and political power, and the decisions they make have impacts that extend well beyond the boundaries of the entities they represent. Using Wells Fargo and Uber as case studies, this Article explores how the failure to account for the public nature of corporate actions, regardle...
The role of social responsibility in corporate governance has been the subject of debate for nearly ...
The author analyzes corporate social responsibility in light of the particularly central historical ...
Corporate codes, nothing more than statements that define a corporation\u27s own best behavior, have...
This Article deploys the sociological theory of social license, or the acceptance of a business or o...
Despite policymakers’ intentions, big tech companies and entrepreneurial upstarts sometimes use thei...
This article examines the concept of the corporate "social license," which governs the extent to whi...
The Social License to Operate, or ‘social license,’ is a recent concept of business ethics, emerging...
Seven U.S. states have recently adopted the benefit corporation or the flexible purpose corporation—...
This paper interrogates the capacity for social control to act as a complement and alternative to th...
Adolf Berle and Gardiner Means’s The Modern Corporation and Private Property has been thoroughly min...
Corporate social responsibility has become a subject of growing importance in business and law. Toda...
This paper explores the mechanisms by which corporations can contribute to society. It examines the ...
Social responsibility --the doctrine that corporations are obligated to place public service ahead o...
A growing number of companies are embracing social value creation as a core part of their business s...
Akbar, DH ORCiD: 0000-0002-2269-5056; Rolfe, JC ORCiD: 0000-0001-7659-7040; Sultan, P ORCiD: 0000-00...
The role of social responsibility in corporate governance has been the subject of debate for nearly ...
The author analyzes corporate social responsibility in light of the particularly central historical ...
Corporate codes, nothing more than statements that define a corporation\u27s own best behavior, have...
This Article deploys the sociological theory of social license, or the acceptance of a business or o...
Despite policymakers’ intentions, big tech companies and entrepreneurial upstarts sometimes use thei...
This article examines the concept of the corporate "social license," which governs the extent to whi...
The Social License to Operate, or ‘social license,’ is a recent concept of business ethics, emerging...
Seven U.S. states have recently adopted the benefit corporation or the flexible purpose corporation—...
This paper interrogates the capacity for social control to act as a complement and alternative to th...
Adolf Berle and Gardiner Means’s The Modern Corporation and Private Property has been thoroughly min...
Corporate social responsibility has become a subject of growing importance in business and law. Toda...
This paper explores the mechanisms by which corporations can contribute to society. It examines the ...
Social responsibility --the doctrine that corporations are obligated to place public service ahead o...
A growing number of companies are embracing social value creation as a core part of their business s...
Akbar, DH ORCiD: 0000-0002-2269-5056; Rolfe, JC ORCiD: 0000-0001-7659-7040; Sultan, P ORCiD: 0000-00...
The role of social responsibility in corporate governance has been the subject of debate for nearly ...
The author analyzes corporate social responsibility in light of the particularly central historical ...
Corporate codes, nothing more than statements that define a corporation\u27s own best behavior, have...