Course content and structure
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The course is an introduction to sustainable business with a
focus on firms' environmental and social impact on society. It
provides students with an understanding of business sustainability,
corporate social responsibility (CSR), and shared value. Students
will obtain knowledge about how corporations integrate social and
environmental issues in order to identify new business
opportunities, communicate (and collaborate) with their
stakeholders, compete in global markets, and address sustainability
expectations and requirements of firms in the early 21st century.
Besides introducing a number of sustainability issues, the course
provides students with analytical skills and theories to critically
interrogate sustainability ideals and practices.
The course structure provides a historical overview of ideas
concerning the social responsibility of business and the turn
towards sustainability, followed by three approaches (or pillars)
to examining sustainable business. These include ethical decision
making, stakeholder management, and corporate purpose. These
approaches are then integrated and applied in functional business
areas, including CSR strategy, CSR communications including
decoupling and greenwashing, environmental responsibilities,
corporate and transnational governance, and global supply
chains.
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Preliminary list of readings:
- Friedman, M. 1970. The Social Responsibility of Business is to
Increase its Profits. New York Times.
- Carroll, AB 1979. A three-dimensional conceptual model of
corporate performance. Academy of Management Review, 4(4):
497-505.
- Hoffman, M. (1984). General Introduction: Ethical Frameworks
for Application in Business in Business Ethics: Readings and Cases
in Corporate Morality, WMHoffman & JM Moore (Eds),
McGraw-Hill.
- Herzig, C., & Kühn, A.-L. 2017. Corporate Responsibility
Reporting, in: Rasche, A., Morsing, M., & Moon, J. (Eds).
Corporate Social Responsibility: Strategy, Communication,
Governance. Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK.
- Rasche, A. 2009. A necessary supplement: what the UN Global is
and is not. Business and Society, 48(4): 511-53.
- Mitchell, RK, Agle, BR & Wood, J. 1997. Toward a Theory of
Stakeholder Identification and Salience: Defining the Principle of
Who and What Really Counts”, Academy of Management Review, 22(4):
853-886.
- AccountAbility. 2015. AA1000 Stakeholder engagement standard
(2015).
- Porter, ME, & Kramer, MR 2011. Creating Shared Value.
Harvard Business Review, 89(1/2): 62-77.
- Crane, A, Palazzo, G, Spence, L & Matten, D. 2014.
Contesting the value of 'Creating Shared Value', California
Management Review, 56(2): 130-153.
- Delmas, MA & Burbano, VC 2011. The Drivers of Greenwashing.
California Management Review 54: 64-87.
- Lund-Thomsen, P., Lindgreen, A., & Vanhamme, J. 2016.
Industrial clusters and corporate social responsibility in
developing countries: what we know, what we don't know, and
what we need to know. Journal of Business Ethics, 133(1):
9-24.
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Stout, L. (2013). The shareholder value myth. Cornell Law
Faculty Publications.
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Stout, L. (2012) The problem of corporate purpose. Issues in
Governance Studies, 48.
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Jain, T., & Jamali, D. (2017). Strategic approaches to
corporate social responsibility: A comparative study of India and
the Arab World. In Development-Oriented Corporate Social
Responsibility (pp. 71-90). Routledge.
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Jain, T., & Jamali, D. (2016). Looking inside the black box:
The effect of corporate governance on corporate social
responsibility. Corporate governance: an international review,
24(3), 253-273.
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Rasche, A. (2020). The United Nations Global Compact and the
Sustainable Development Goals. In Laasch, O. et al. eds., Research
Handbook of Responsible Management. Edward Elgar Publishing
2020.
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Soundararajan, V., Sahasranamam, S., Khan, Z., & Jain, T.
(2021). Multinational enterprises and the governance of
sustainability practices in emerging market supply chains: An agile
governance perspective. Journal of World Business, 56(2),
101149.
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Jain, T. (2017). Decoupling corporate social orientations: A
cross-national analysis. Business & Society, 56(7),
1033-1067.
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Morsing, M., Schultz, M. (2006). Corporate social responsibility
communication: stakeholder information, response and involvement
strategies. Business Ethics: A European Review, 15(4),
323-338.
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Christensen, LT, Morsing, M., & Thyssen, O. (2013). CSR as
aspirational talk. Organization, 20(3),
372-393.
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