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          Course content, structure and teaching    Analyze how new social and environmental demands from a variety of  stakeholders pose new risks and opportunities to business leaders.  Western firms operating in or sourcing from developing countries  are increasingly held responsible for a range of issues such as  climate change, labor rights and human rights that have previously  been seen as outside a firm’s sphere of influence (Reich  1998). Today stakeholders as diverse as investors, employees, the  media, NGOs and customers have strong views on how corporations  should be run. One example is Nike, which owned no factories in the  US but purchased shoes from factories in Indonesia, China and  Vietnam. Nike came under severe criticism in the mid 1990s because  Nike’s suppliers had forced workers to work extremely long  shifts under dangerous conditions. As a response to the criticism,  Nike issued its own code of conduct for suppliers. Another example  is Wal-Mart which according to Jon Entine, a journalist with the  magazine Ethical Corporation, has turned “from evil  empire to jolly green giant” (Entine 2008: 36). Wal-Mart now  works with suppliers on greening its supply chain including  increasing the purchase of organic cotton, improving energy  efficiency, etc. The course addresses the following key  questions:      
        
          - What drives the Corporate Social Responsibility agenda?
 
          - How should business respond: Minimizing business risk
 
          - How should business respond: Maximizing business  opportunity
 
          - Limits to CSR
 
          - Managing CSR initiatives: Codes of conduct
 
          - Reporting: benefits and drawbacks
 
          - Institutional investors and socially responsible  investments
 
          - The crystal ball: New CSR issues and challenges?
 
         
        Key words: Corporate social responsibility (CSR),  sustainability, business environment, strategy, management        
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          Recommended literature Session 1: Introduction: Theoretical tools for  understanding the Corporate Social Responsibility agenda    Session 1 provides a brief overview of the development of  corporate social responsibility and focuses in particular on the  impact of globalization. In session 1 we will discuss a range of  theoretical frameworks for understanding these changes.             Ruth Aguilera, Deborah E. Rupp, Cythia A. Williams and Jyoti  Ganapathi (2007). “Putting the “S” Back in  Corporate Social Responsibility: A Multi-Level Theory of Social  Change in Organizations”. In Academy of Management  Review, Vol. 33, No. 3: 836-863             Dana Brown, Anne Roemer-Mahler and Antje Vetterlein (2010).  “Theorising Transnational Corporations as Social Actors: An  Analysis of Corporate Motivations”. Department of Business  and Politics, Working Paper no. 61 (published also in Business  and Politics).             Thomas Donaldson (1995). “The Stakeholder Theory of the  Corporation”. In Academy of Management Review, Vol.  20, No. 1: 65-91.             Milton Friedman (1970). New York Times Magazine,  “The social responsibility of business is to increase its  profits”, September 13.          The Economist(2008) special issue on CSR titled  “Doing Good. Business and the Sustainability  Challenge”, January.             Case (please note these are TWO separate cases – please  order both):      Tesco: Delivering the Goods (A): IMD-3-1955      Tesco: Delivering the Goods (B): IMD-3-1956                        Session 2: How should business respond? Minimizing  business risk, maximizing business opportunity    In sessions 2-3 we will address and evaluate some influential  views on why and how business should engage in CSR.             Michael Porter and Mark Kramer (2002), “The Competitive  Advantage of Corporate Philanthropy: Competitive Context”. In  Harvard Business Review.             Michael Porter and Mark Kramer (2006), “Strategy and  Society. In Harvard Business Review.             Michael Porter and Mark Kramer (2011). “Creating Shared  Value”. In Harvard Business Review.             David Vogel, “The Market for Virtue: The Potential and  Limits of Corporate Social Responsibility”, California  Management Review, Washington DC, 2005.          The Economist(Schumpeter) (2011). “Oh, Mr. Porter.  The new big idea from business’s greatest living guru seems a  bit undercooked”, March.                    CASE (you can download this from the CBS library since this week  we use an article from the California Management Review): James B.  Austin and Herman “Dutch” Leonhard (2008). “Can  the virtuous mouse and the wealthy elephant live happily ever  after?”. In California Management Review, Vol. 51,  No. 1.                 Session 3: Business response (continued)    Debora L. Spar and Lane T. La Mure (2003). “The Power of  Activism: Assessing the Impact of NGOs on Global Business”.  In California Management Review, Vol. 45, No 3, Spring.             Aneel Karnani (2011). “Doing Well by Doing Good – The  Grand Illusion”. In California Management Review,  Winter.             Isabelle Maignan and David A. Ralston (2002). “Corporate  Social Responsibility in Europe and the U.S.: Insights from  Businesses' Self-Presentations”. In Journalof  International Business Studies, Vol. 33.      Dirk Matten and Jeremy Moon (2008). “Implicit” and  “Explicit” CSR: A Conceptual Framework for a  Comparative Understanding of Corporate Social Responsibility. In  Academy of Management Review, Vol. 33, No. 2: 404-424.             Case: Austin and Reavis, HBS 9-303-055, “Starbucks and  Conservation International”             Go to Starbucks website. See what they have to say about  fair-trade http://www.starbucks.com/aboutus/csr.asp If at all  possible visit a Starbucks. Look at the price list for coffee  beans:        
        
          - Which are most expensive?
 
          - Why the price difference?
 
          - What did you learn about Starbucks’ achievement of Fair  Trade goals?
 
         
        
          Session 4: Limits to CSR.
              Deborah Doane (2005). “The myth of CSR: The problem with  assuming that companies can do well while also doing good is that  markets don’t really work that way”. In Stanford  Social Innovation Review, fall, 23-29.             Timothy Devinney (2009). “Is The Socially Responsible  Corporation a Myth? The Good, Bad and Ugly of Corporate Social  Responsibility”. In Academy of Management  Perspectives, forthcoming May             Ethan B. Kapstein (2001). “The Corporate Ethics  Crusade”. In Foreign Affairs, September/October.             Robert Reich (1998). “The New Meaning of Corporate Social  Responsibility”. In California Management Review,  Winter, 40, 2.                    Case: Stanford case (please note that we have THREE related cases:       “Anatomy of a Corporate Campaign: Rainforest Action  Network and Citigroup (A). P42A. By David P Baron et al      “Anatomy of a Corporate Campaign: Rainforest Action Network  and Citigroup (B). P42B. By David P Baron et al      “Anatomy of a Corporate Campaign: Rainforest Action Network  and Citigroup (C). P42C. By David P Baron et al                 Session 5: Managing CSR issues: Codes of conduct.    Jette Steen Knudsen 2011. ”Company Delistings from the UN  Global Compact: Limited Business Demand or Domestic Governance  Failure?” Journal of Business Ethics. 103 (3):  331-349. DOI: 10.1007/s10551-011-0875-0.             Richard Locke, Fei Qin and Alberto Brause (2006), “Does  Monitoring Improve Labor Standards? Lessons from Nike”, MIT  Sloan Working Paper No. 4612-06.             Richard Locke and Monica Romis (2006), “Beyond Codes of  Conduct: Work Organization and Labor Standards in two Mexican  Garment Factories”, Working Paper No. 4617-06, MIT.             Lynn Paine et al (2005), “Up to the Code?” Harvard  Business Review, No 12, 2005.             David Vogel (2008), “Private Global Business  Regulation” in Annual Review of Political Science, Vol. 11,  2008:261-82. Article can be found at:   http://www.haas.berkeley.edu/faculty/pdf/vogel_david.pdf                  Please note that this week we have TWO related cases      Case: Wal-Mart: Nonmarket Pressure and Reputational Risk (A) P-52A  5/15/06      Case: Wal-Mart: Nonmarket Pressure and Reputational Risk (B) P-52B  5/15/06          Optional    K. Bondy, David Matten and Jeremy Moon, “The Adoption of  Voluntary Codes of Conduct in MNCs”: A three country  comparative study. In Business and Society Review 109(4):  449-477.          Session 6: CSR and board of directors.    Andrea Beltratti 2005, “The complementarity between  Corporate Governance and Corporate Social Responsibility”,  Geneva Papers, 30.             Leonhard and Rangan, “Corporate social responsibility  strategy and boards of directors (boardroom briefing)”. The  article can be downloaded at   http://www.hbs.edu/socialenterprise/resources/corporate.html           Phil Mirvis, “Profile of Practice”, 2008 (this article  will be uploaded on the electronic system)             Strandberg, “The role of the board of directors in corporate  social responsibility” (report), June 2008. The report can be  downloaded at:   http://www.corostrandberg.com/publications_Corporate_Sustainability_Governance.html                  Case:      Khurana, R. and James Weber (2007). “Tyco International  – Corporate Governance”. Harvard Business School,  4-408-059.          Session 7: CSR and domestic institutions and  regulation.    In sessions 7 and 8 we explore the growing interrelationship  between private and government regulatory frameworks.             Dana Brown and Jette Steen Knudsen (2011), “The Emerging  Spread of CSR Initiatives in Multinational Firms – How Do  National Institutions and Government Policies Matter?”,   paper presented at the SASE Conference 23-25 June (Jette will  upload the paper once the system is running).             Tim Buthe (2010), “Private Regulation in the Global Economy:  A (P)Review”. In Business and Politics.           Campbell, J. (2007). “Why Would Corporations Behave in  Socially Responsible Ways? An Institutional Theory of Corporate  Social Responsibility”. In Academy of Management  Review, 32: 946-967.             Maria Gjølberg (2009), “The origin of corporate social  responsibility: global forces or national legacies?” In  Socio-Economic Review, 7.             Gregory Jackson and Androniki Apostolakau (2010) “Corporate  Social Responsibility in Western Europe: An Institutional Mirror or  Substitute?” In Journal of Business Ethics, 94.      Mike Valente and Andrew Crane (2010), “Public Responsibility  and Private Enterprise in Developing Countries”. In  California Management Review, Vol. 52, No. 3.          Session 8: The crystal ball: New CSR issues and  challenges?     We will continue our discussion from session 7 on private  regulation. We will close the course by discussing new potential  CSR issues and challenges (internet censorship in China is one such  possible challenge).          Internet Censorship in China:    Case: Global Corporate Social responsibility vs. Local Legal  Compliance: A Case of Internet Censorship in China: 706-061-1  
 
  Novo Nordisk A/S and the Triple Bottom Line  approach:      Jette Steen Knudsen will provide material for this case discussion               
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