APOLOGIES FOR CROSS-POSTINGS
Dear Colleagues,
"The Journal of Corporate Citizenship" Issue 24 is a special theme
issue:
CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY IN EMERGING ECONOMIES
Edited by Jedrzej George Frynas, Middlesex University Business School,
UK
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A limited number of individual copies of this special issue are
available for purchase at the price of £25.00/$45.00. Postage worldwide
is gratis.
All papers from "The Journal of Corporate Citizenship" are also
available to download or buy as PDFs
You can also save up to 50% on subscriptions
*********************************
To place an order, to view all paper abstracts, or to view the
"Introduction" by Jedrzej George Frynas
please visit the Greenleaf website at:
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and click on "What’s New" or go to the journal home page under the
"Journals" menu
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Until now, most of the research on CSR has focused on developed-country
firms, mainly from North America and Europe. However, there is
increasing evidence that non-Western firms from emerging economies are
as aware of CSR issues and are striving to become good corporate
citizens. This special issue therefore aims to fill an important gap in
our knowledge by investigating the state of CSR in a number of key
emerging economies.
A recent OECD-commissioned study by one of the contributors to this
special issue, Jeremy Baskin, demonstrates that CSR has been embraced
by firms in emerging economies: for instance, about 53% of the assessed
emerging-market companies publish details of their environmental
policies and environmental management systems, compared with an average
for high-income OECD countries of about 59%. In a few areas,
emerging-market firms from selected countries appear to outperform
their developed-country counterparts. For instance, Brazil has more
small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in the United Nations Global
Compact (44 SMEs as of December 2006) than European countries such as
the UK (31), Germany (5) or Italy (3). Similarly, the number of
Malaysian companies involved with ISO 14001 certification was found by
one study to be proportionately higher than that found in some
developed countries. Even more significantly, while the term CSR may
not have existed in their respective vocabularies, social obligations
of firms towards employees or wider society have long been recognised
in some societies such as Malaysia and India.
"The Journal of Corporate Citizenship" has been a pioneer in exploring
the state of CSR in emerging economies with special issues on corporate
citizenship in Latin America (Issue 21), corporate citizenship in
Africa (Issue 18) and CSR in Asia (Issue 13). In contrast to these
previous special issues, this collection does not focus on specific
topics such as reporting or on specific companies. A key aim of this
special issue is to investigate peculiar local influences on CSR in
different societies, as CSR practice develops within a specific social
context. To this end, the articles in this special issue represent
country case studies in five emerging economies: Argentina, Mexico,
Nigeria, Malaysia and Pakistan, along with an overview of the theme
from Jeremy Baskin.
In contrast to much previous work, this special issue also looks not
merely at what foreign multinational firms do in emerging economies but
specifically looks at what indigenous firms do in terms of CSR, which
is a neglected theme in current research.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
* World Review
Jem Bendell and Jonathan Cohen
* Introduction
Jedrzej George Frynas, Middlesex University Business School, UK
* Corporate Social Responsibility in Emerging Economies
Malini Mehra, Centre for Social Markets, India
* Corporate Social Responsibility in an African Context
Foluso Phillips, Phillips Consulting Group, Nigeria
* Corporate Responsibility in Emerging Markets
Jeremy Baskin, University of Cambridge, UK
* Corporate Social and Environmental Responsibility in Argentina: The
Evolution of an Agenda
Peter Newell, University of Warwick, UK, and Ana Muro, Centre for the
Study of Corporate Sustainability, Argentina
* Local and Global Dimensions of Corporate Social Responsibility in
Mexico
Francis Weyzig, SOMO (Centre for Research on Multinational
Corporations),
* Corporate Social Responsibility in Nigeria: Western Mimicry or
Indigenous Influences?
Kenneth M. Amaeshi, Warwick Business School, UK, Bongo C. Adi,
University of Tsukuba, Japan, Chris Ogbechie, Pan-African University,
Nigeria, and Olufemi O. Amao, University College Cork, Ireland
* Realising Corporate Social Responsibility in Malaysia: A View from
the Accounting Profession
Norhayah Zulkifli, University of Malaya, Malaysia, and Azlan Amran,
University Science Malaysia
* From Principles to Practice: Exploring Corporate Social
Responsibility in Pakistan
S. Jaseem Ahmad, Middlesex University Business School, UK
*********************************
A limited number of individual copies of this special issue are
available for purchase at the price of £25.00/$45.00. Postage worldwide
is gratis.
All papers from "The Journal of Corporate Citizenship" are also
available to download or buy as PDFs
You can also save up to 50% on subscriptions
*********************************
Alternatively, please contact:
Jayney Bown
Greenleaf Publishing
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Sheffield S3 8GG
UK
Tel: +44 (0)114 282 3475
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