Date Issued
2012
Description
Academic literature recognizes that firms in different countries deal with Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) in different ways. Because of this, analysts presume that variations in national institutional arrangements affect CSR practices. Literature however lacks specificity in determining, first, what parts of national political economic configurations actually affect CSR practices; second, the precise aspects of CSR affected by national-institutional variables; third, how casual mechanisms between national institutional framework variables and aspects of CSR practices work. Because of this the literature is not able to address to what extent CSR practices are affected by either global or national policies, discourses and economic pressures; and to what extent CSR evolves as either an alternative to or an extension of national institutional arrangements. This paper proposes an alternative approach that focuses on an exploration of links between disaggregated variables, which can then be the basis for imagining new national-institutional configurations affecting aspects of CSR.
Subject
Corporate Social responsibility, national institutions, political economy, varieties of capitalism, globalization
Disciplines
Business Law, Public Responsibility, and Ethics | Political Economy | Public Policy
Document Type
Working Paper
Recommended Citation
Fransen, Luc, "The Embeddedness of Responsible Business Practice: National Institutional Environments and Corporate Social Responsibility" (2012). Transnational Business Governance Interactions Working Papers. 1.
https://commons.allard.ubc.ca/tbgi/1
Included in
Business Law, Public Responsibility, and Ethics Commons, Political Economy Commons, Public Policy Commons