Author(s)

    • Fukukawa, Kyoko

Bibliographic Information

Corporate social responsibility in Asia

edited by Kyoko Fukukawa

(RoutledgeCurzon international business in Asia series, 5)

Routledge, 2010

  • : hbk

Available at  / 19 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) is an important issue in contemporary business, management and politics, especially since the launch of the United Nations Global Compact in 2000 as an initiative to encourage businesses worldwide to adopt sustainable and socially responsible policies, and to report on them. This book examines the theory and practice of CSR in Asia. The philosophical and ideological underpinnings of CSR are rooted in Anglo-American and European principles of liberal democratic rights, justice and societal structures. This book not only considers the impact of Western CSR practices in Asia, but also provides much needed Asian perspectives on this issue. It investigates the operation of CSR in different countries across Asia, including China, Japan, Malaysia, Thailand and Bangladesh - comparing the different meanings given to CSR, and the varying degrees of success experienced in different national contexts. This book argues if CSR is ever to revolutionize the manner in which we trade then it is needs to open itself up to the full variety of social responsibility as it occurs around the world. The book re-maps and refines debates about CSR as a global phenomenon, and will be of great value to professionals making strategic decisions in the global business environment.

Table of Contents

1. Social Paradigms in China and the West 2. Structural Change in Corporate Society and CSR in Japan 3. Perceptions of CSR and its Adoption to Business Practice in the Thai Context 4. A Multilevel Assessment of Corporate Social Responsibility Disclosure in Malaysia 5. Exploitation of Labor in Bangladeshi RMG Sector: Who is responsible? 6. CSR - a Virtuous Circle. But Which Circle? And Whose 'Virtue'?

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