Critical Studies on Corporate Responsibility, Governance and Sustainability
Reframing Corporate Social Responsibility: Lessons from the Global Financial Crisis
ISBN: 978-0-85724-455-0, eISBN: 978-0-85724-456-7
ISSN: 2043-9059
Publication date: 13 December 2010
Citation
(2010), "Critical Studies on Corporate Responsibility, Governance and Sustainability", Sun, W., Stewart, J. and Pollard, D. (Ed.) Reframing Corporate Social Responsibility: Lessons from the Global Financial Crisis (Critical Studies on Corporate Responsibility, Governance and Sustainability, Vol. 1), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, p. iii. https://doi.org/10.1108/S2043-9059(2010)0000001023
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2010, Emerald Group Publishing Limited
- Critical Studies on Corporate Responsibility, Governance and Sustainability
- Critical Studies on Corporate Responsibility, Governance and Sustainability
- Copyright page
- List of Tables
- List of Figures
- List of Boxes
- List of contributors
- Editorial Advisory and Review Board
- Acknowledgments
- Reframing corporate social responsibility
- The nature of responsibility and the credit crunch
- The role of corporate social responsibility in the financial crisis
- Corporate social irresponsibility: The role of government and ideology
- Performance management and neo-liberal labour market governance: the case of the UK
- Who is responsible for the financial crisis? Lessons from a separation thesis
- Crisis, rescue, and corporate social responsibility under American corporate law
- Institutionalisation of corporate social responsibility in the corporate governance code: The new trend of the Dutch model
- When should companies voluntarily agree to stop doing things that are legal and profitable but ‘socially useless’; and would they ever?
- The dark side of social capital: Lessons from the Madoff case
- CSR 2.0: from the age of greed to the age of responsibility
- Dying of consumption? Voluntary simplicity as an antidote to hypermaterialism
- Corporate social responsibility in developing countries: polish perspective