ABSTRACT

Following recent growth of ethical consumerism, customers and other stakeholders increasingly pressure organizations to be socially responsible and minimize their negative impact on the environment. Accordingly, a plethora of firms have integrated corporate social responsibility (CSR) at the center of their business strategies and actions. Whilst this has resulted in many firms meeting their broader responsibilities toward society and the environment, some firms have used CSR in a manipulative and insincere way. As stakeholders become aware of such misuse of CSR, largely thanks to the rapid evolution of information technologies, they start to penalize firms by spreading negative word of mouth about them, and specifically about their CSR knowledge, values, and actions.

Now, more than ever before, stakeholders are increasingly critical and cautious in their assessments of firms’ CSR knowledge, values, and actions. On this background, this edited volume sheds light on different internal and external perspectives spanning CSR knowledge, values, and actions. It shares theoretical, practical, and case-based insights on the broader topic and can be of interest to researchers, academics, practitioners, and advanced students in the fields of CSR and business ethics, knowledge management, strategy, and marketing.

part 2|83 pages

CSR values

chapter 8|19 pages

Between the feminine and the feminist firm

A review of CSR/Business Ethics approaches to gender issues

chapter 9|19 pages

Unveiling socially responsible licensing

Challenges and opportunities

chapter 10|10 pages

CSR Value Co-Creation in a Circular Economy

The Case of Returhuset

part 3|90 pages

CSR actions

chapter 12|19 pages

CSR orientations in an unequal, dualistic socio-economic situation

A qualitative analysis of Black-owned South African SMEs

chapter 15|12 pages

Fitness World CSR actions

An essential part of fixing the brand