ssteinhagen Submitted by
Susan Steinhagen

Suzanne Young on CSR and Corporate Governance

30. April 2010 08:36
Suzanne Young, teaching at La Trobe University’s Graduate School of Management talks about the links between CSR and corporate governance, and what we can learn from Australia’s experience.

Tags: , , ,

Categories: CSR | Corporate Social Responsibility

ssteinhagen Submitted by
Susan Steinhagen

CSR at the University level

26. April 2010 10:55

Tags: , ,

Categories: Creating Shared Value

ssteinhagen Submitted by
Susan Steinhagen

CSR in India

13. April 2010 10:24
R Venugopal, Professor at the Institute for Financial Management & Research, writing for the Economic Times, discusses how CSR is understood and addressed by Indian companies and suggests a collaborative approach between the public, private and civil society sectors to make a positive impact on society.
ssteinhagen Submitted by
Susan Steinhagen

Corporate Social Responsibility: Wisdom or Window Dressing?

13. April 2010 10:23
William Fisher interviews Professor Chip Pitts, one of the world’s leading CSR authorities on CSR, its impact on the recent economic crisis and how companies can make CSR part of the corporate culture.

Tags: , ,

Categories: CSR

ssteinhagen Submitted by
Susan Steinhagen

The cost of CSR – a consumer’s point of view

12. April 2010 08:11
A recent survey conducted by a research-based consultancy Penn Schoen Berland in partnership with brand consulting firm Landor Associates and communications firm Burson-Marsteller shows that American consumers are willing to pay a premium for goods from socially responsible companies, with 70 percent saying they would pay more for a $100 product from a company they regard as responsible. The survey measured consumer perceptions of corporate social responsibility practices and ranked companies that are the most responsible. Despite the economic recession, 59 percent of those responding said they plan to spend the same or more on products from socially responsible companies. The survey found that 75 percent of consumers say it is important for companies in each of the 14 industries tested to be socially responsible. Of those industries, Food, Consumer Goods and Retailers were perceived as performing best, while Financial Services, Healthcare and Media were perceived as performing worst. The results are based on 1,001 online interviews with the general public in the U.S. conducted in mid-February 2010.

Tags: , , ,

Categories: CSR | Corporate Social Responsibility

ssteinhagen Submitted by
Susan Steinhagen

What you need to know to incorporate CSR into your operations

12. April 2010 08:10
Cameron-Pyper writes about the problems most companies are likely to face when implementing CSR strategies and how to overcome them. Jo Nelgadde points to the signs a company needs to be aware of to improve its CSR budgeting process.

Tags: , ,

Categories: CSR | Corporate Social Responsibility

ssteinhagen Submitted by
Susan Steinhagen

CSR – A necessity or PR strategy?

12. April 2010 08:10
Many of us in the CSR space have followed and contributed to countless debates and discussions on the merits of embedding CSR into a company’s operations.  However, in the first of a series of discussions, Sanford Lewis, a lawyer focussed on environment and securities, questions whether sustainability or CSR is a fiduciary duty of corporate directors.

Tags: ,

Categories: CSR | Corporate Social Responsibility

ssteinhagen Submitted by
Susan Steinhagen

UN Global Compact Releases Good Practice Notes on Human Rights

12. April 2010 08:09
The Global Compact has announced the release of two good practice notes on human rights, recently adopted by the Global Compact's Human Rights Working Group. The first note is titled: How Business Can Encourage Governments to Fulfil their Human Rights Obligations and the second Setting up a Multi-Stakeholder Panel as a Tool for Effective Stakeholder Dialogue. The development of good practice notes is an ongoing activity of the Human Rights Working Group, and includes support from Stanford Law School’s Pro Bono Colloquium on International Business Practices. Good practice notes seek to identify general approaches that have been recognized by a number of companies and stakeholders as being good for business and good for human rights.

Tags: , ,

Categories: CSR

ssteinhagen Submitted by
Susan Steinhagen

Prakash Sethi on Corporate Social Accountability

6. April 2010 10:58
Prakash Sethi, management professor at Baruch College at the City University of New York talks to Ethical Corporation about corporate accountability, the role of NGOs, and how companies can move from corporate social responsibility to corporate social accountability.

Tags: , , ,

Categories: CSR | Corporate Social Responsibility

ssteinhagen Submitted by
Susan Steinhagen

A socially responsible asparagus company

24. March 2010 14:46
Janne Nielsen presents a case study of Danper – an agricultural export company in Peru that has positively influenced the local community by embracing CSR.

Tags: , ,

Categories: CSR | Rural Development

ssteinhagen Submitted by
Susan Steinhagen

Beyond Corporate Social Responsibility to Corporate Social Engagement

17. March 2010 08:50
David Gershon, Founder and CEO of Empowerment Institute, discusses how and why businesses should lead the charge against climate change and its adverse effects on our planet.

Tags: , ,

Categories: CSR | Corporate Social Responsibility

ssteinhagen Submitted by
Susan Steinhagen

Poverty alleviation as a CSR activity

17. March 2010 08:49
Edward Probir Mondol writes about the state-of-play of CSR in Bangladesh and how local businesses are increasingly becoming involved in poverty alleviation programmes as part of their CSR activities. Eradicating extreme hunger and poverty is one of eight United Nations Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) agreed to by all the world’s countries and all the world’s leading development institutions in 1990. The deadline set to achieve these goals is 2010.

Tags: , , ,

Categories: CSR | Corporate Social Responsibility

ssteinhagen Submitted by
Susan Steinhagen

How can one measure CSR Returns?

17. March 2010 08:47
“You cannot manage what you cannot measure” is an oft-repeated MBA maxim. A company that is just starting its first steps toward embedding requires a lot of investment and commitment -- both financial and human. How can a company measure CSR performance and to make sure that the investment is worth it? Sam Murata, President of SANYO North America, suggests how.

Tags: , ,

Categories: CSR | Corporate Social Responsibility

ssteinhagen Submitted by
Susan Steinhagen

Nestlé wins Corporate Responsibility Award in Malaysia

17. March 2010 08:46
Nestlé was one of seven publicly listed companies in Malaysia honoured for its outstanding corporate responsibility practices at the StarBiz-ICR Malaysia Corporate Responsibility Awards 2009. Awards were given out under marketplace, workplace, environment and community for two market capitalisation segments, namely RM1 billion and above, and below RM1 billion. Nestlé won the award in the marketplace category (companies with market capitalisation of RM1 billion) for the second time running. Other winners were Guinness Anchor, DiGi.Com, Telekom Malaysia, Malaysia Airports Holdings, Tex Cycle Technology and Aluminium Co. Receiving the award for Nestlé, Marc Seiler, Executive Director, Finance & Control for Malaysia and Singapore said: “It is important for us to ensure we improve the quality of lives of the communities we work with. In order to ensure our business sustainability, we strive to obtain a win-win situation for all parties.”  

Tags: ,

Categories: CSR | Corporate Social Responsibility

ssteinhagen Submitted by
Susan Steinhagen

Malaysian Premier urges businesses to give back to society

17. March 2010 08:44

Malaysian Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak, in a separate CSR award ceremony, urged business leaders to give back to society by helping the needy through CSR initiatives. He said businesses and corporations did not operate in a vacuum as they were part of society and depended not only on their stakeholders but society at large for their existence and operations.

 "It is clear that we need to move CSR up the business agenda and embed it into the DNA of every company. This presents an enormous challenge, as well as a huge opportunity to get things right from the start," he added.

 Najib said the government had demonstrated its commitment to push the CSR agenda by stressing on holistic and sustainable development in the 2010 Budget. Companies, he said, were required to integrate aspects of CSR as part of business sustainability and it was mandatory for them to disclose the CSR activities in their annual reports.

He presented awards to winners of eight categories and the overall award went to national oil giant Petronas which also bagged the education, culture and heritage awards.

Tags: , ,

Categories: CSR | Corporate Social Responsibility

OTOnyeaso Submitted by
Obi Tabansi Onyeaso

Peace in Our Time: Why the Shareowner versus Stake-tenant Conflict is Outdated

2. March 2010 11:45
Normative extremism in the shareholder versus stakeholder debate may well be on its way out. If shareholder value was the pre-eminent metric of corporate entity success in the past two decades, in the new decade it will be far less so. The undisputed twenty-plus-year reign of financialization could be drawing to an overdue end.  Similarly, the exclusive rights on do-gooder patents that activist groups, environmental campaigners, social crusaders and community advocates have hitherto laid claim to might be nearer its expiry date than its partisans realize.  After waging an acrimonious war for so long, veterans on both sides have almost failed to notice how close they are to a final settlement. My prognosis is that the fanatical bipolarism of hardliners on either side of the debate will give way to one that vigorously searches for common ground. Responding to questions in a 2006 interview, Peter Brabeck-Letmathe, the former Nestlé chief executive, urged companies to strike a balance between, ‘financial fundamentalists’, stubbornly wedded to the view that a public company’s main mission is to enhance shareholder value at all costs and oversee a steady rise in the stock price, on the one hand, and, on the other, ‘ethical stakeholders’ who are actively sympathetic to the position that the creation of a financial surplus is not the primary goal of companies, but rather the delivery of social benefits. In reality, this either-or conception is an anachronism, at least, within many boardrooms. Most contemporary boards recognize the need to accommodate the interests of a broader set of interests in the formulation and execution of their business strategy. Saddled with multifarious pressures to implement proposals that benefit a basket of diverse constituencies, and not only shareholders, boards have grown quite adept at appraising their responsibilities and integrating its fulfillment in their corporate plans. While ‘ethical shareholders’, who, by the way, do not form a monolithic interest bloc, are content to make demands from vertical silos, boards which are charged with reviewing, analyzing, prioritizing and approving them, are obliged to progress much further to dealing with their implications on the business model, competitiveness, and profitability of the firm. Resolving these dilemmas require delicacy, tact and a firm grasp of the competing arguments. The responses of boards to these demands, under the rubric generally referred to as corporate social responsibility (CSR), have undergone a significant evolution in recent years. From the philanthropy-dense activities of early years, today many companies have learned to distinguish between spontaneous charitable instincts and business-inspired programs. The January 2010 announcement that Goldman Sachs, the investment bank, would require its partners and senior executives to donate to charity falls in the former category. Noble as these gifts may be, their discretionary character and isolation from the investment bank’s value chain disqualifies them as CSR initiatives. Professor Geoffrey Heal’s definition of CSR as ‘a program of actions taken to reduce externalized costs or to avoid distributional conflicts’ brings to the fore the fundamental nature of such activities. Heal’s definition presumes productive activities which generate these costs and a cumulative value chain whose end product ownership is disputed by each link on the assembly line with a legitimate claim on it. In their path-breaking paper, ‘Strategy and Society: The Link between Competitive Advantage and Corporate Social Responsibility,’ published in the December 2006 edition of the Harvard Business Review, Michael E. Porter and Mark R. Kramer argue that the time has come to stop treating ‘corporate success and social welfare as a zero-sum game.’ According to the researchers, ‘if corporations were to analyze their prospects for social responsibility using the same frameworks that guide their core business choices, they would discover that CSR can be much more than a cost, a constraint, or a charitable deed – it can be a source of opportunity, innovation and competitive advantage.’ Increasingly, many companies are bringing the same dispassionate criteria they use for business decision-making to their CSR agenda setting. In his speech, ‘A Conflict of Interests? Reconciling the Interests of Shareholders and Stakeholders,’ delivered at a 2008 RiskMetrics conference, Sir Stephen Green, chairman of HSBC Group, pointed out that sustainability is about ‘bringing relevant issues together into your own business model.’ CSR has outgrown its humanitarian-moralist origins to assume its proper stature as an integral part of value creation and assurance process at corporations. Undoubtedly, articulating the social contract that binds shareowners and staketenants has grown in importance. In its 2007 Creating Shared Value Report, Nestlé explains that ‘to be successful in the long term it has to create value, not only for its shareholders but also for society . . . not as philanthropy or an add-on, but a fundamental part of our business strategy.’ For corporations whose survival skills are sharply honed, co-opting the new thinking is a clear-headed choice for Darwinian longevity. From building water processing plants in Nigeria to training women in sustainable farming in Pakistan to micro-finance loans for dairy farmers in South America, the company has dovetailed its CSR initiatives with its business goals. In fact, Nestlé has been so successful at establishing and communicating the synthesis of interests between its financial statements and CSR activities that it has won shareholder support for them. This progress presents an historic opportunity for activists and campaigners who have long complained about the indifference and insincerity of companies to socially responsible practices. Will they take the companies up on their word or prefer to keep barking at an uprooted tree? The convergence of values must not go unnoticed. Companies, like individuals, are still far from the ideal in what they aspire to become within their communities. But strident criticism and persistent condemnation of former practices that companies have taken bold steps to correct is counter-productive and undermines the stated goals of these organizations. Around the world, companies are extending the hand of reconciliation. Would the other side accept it? The time to seize the day is now.
ssteinhagen Submitted by
Susan Steinhagen

CSR in the United Arab Emirates

24. February 2010 10:27
A recent national survey in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) indicates that although companies are showing high awareness of CSR, an inordinately low number of companies actually practice CSR. The study covering all 7 emirates was undertaken by the Dubai Chamber of Commerce and Industry, and funded by The Emirates Foundation. According to the study, while CSR has made its way into the lexicon of businesses, over 90% of the companies surveyed do not currently adopt CSR policies and practices. However, Dubai and Abu Dhabi appear to be the driving force behind CSR practices, which could hope to provide the momentum for implementation of CSR throughout the UAE. Although the countries in the Gulf were only mildly affected by the economic crisis that ravaged many economies in the Western hemisphere, businesses in the UAE would be wise to learn from this experience and develop new strategies to better manage their portfolio. The European Union is presently looking to strengthen bilateral business relations with the UAE at present. The Swedish Minister of Trade Dr. Ewa Helena Bjorling, while addressing a press conference at the Jeddah Economic Forum, urged the country to move away from protectionist tendencies and encouraged increasing transparency in businesses.
ssteinhagen Submitted by
Susan Steinhagen

Addressing water shortages through CSR

24. February 2010 10:25
Yanti Triwadiantini of the Jakarta Post, in a recent article, discusses why companies should focus on efficient water management in their business operations to not only protect the environment, but also support and improve local communities, making companies more environmentally sustainable as well as socially acceptable.

Tags: ,

Categories: CSR | Corporate Social Responsibility | Creating Shared Value | Water

ssteinhagen Submitted by
Susan Steinhagen

Canada takes long strides toward CSR

21. January 2010 09:44
As part of the Canadian government’s strategy on CSR, The Centre for Excellence in Corporate Social Responsibility was launched in Ottawa. This new website will create a one-stop-shop with the latest information on corporate social responsibility rules, laws and best practices, as well as timely and practical information and advice on foreign countries, local networks and relevant experiences of Canadian companies, civil society and other stakeholders operating abroad. The focus of this site is to help Canadian companies doing business around the world by providing tools and information for all stakeholders, and raising the bar for excellent CSR-related practices in the extractive industry. In addition, Canada has also created a $20 million programme targeted at Canadian businesses that wish to invest responsibly in developing countries. This programme aims to increase Canadian direct investment around the world and strengthen global economic partnerships.
ssteinhagen Submitted by
Susan Steinhagen

U.S. Executives Say CSR Initiatives Can Boost Profits

15. January 2010 08:54
Three-quarters of senior U.S. executives say corporate citizenship can boost profits over time, according to the Economist Intelligence Unit's report, “Corporate citizenship: profiting from a sustainable business”. Sixteen percent said the top motivation for such initiatives were revenue growth, another 16 percent said they aim to increase profits, and 13 percent said the main goal is to reduce costs. To read the complete article, please visit: http://www.environmentalleader.com/2008/11/26/us-execs-say-csr-initiatives-can-boost-profit/

TextBox Video Nutri

 

Amir Dossal from the United Nations Office for partnerships explains why the private sector - with its expertise, technology, management skills, and global reach - must be encouraged to "invest its creativity" in the Millennium Development Goals.

TextBox Video Water

 
Water management

How can we solve the world's water crisis?

TextBox Video Rural

 

The non-profit organisation, International Development Enterprises (IDE) Cambodia, was awarded the first Nestlé Prize in Creating Shared Value for a rural development project which aims to improve the living standards of the Cambodian rural population by increasing agricultural productivity and income.

Latest Posts