Post-Partnership Strategies for Defining Corporate Responsibility: The Business Social Compliance Initiative
Abstract
While cross-sectoral partnerships are frequently presented as a way to achieve sustainable development, some corporations that first tried using the strategy are now changing direction. Growing tired of what are, in their eyes, inefficient and unproductive cross-sectoral partnerships, firms are starting to form post-cross-sectoral partnerships (‘post-partnerships’) open exclusively to corporations. This paper examines one such post-partnership project, the Business Social Compliance Initiative, to analyse the possibility of post-partnerships establishing stable definitions of ‘corporate responsibility’. We do this by creating a theoretical framework based on actor–network theory and institutional theory. Using this framework, we show that post-partnerships suffer from the paradox of striving to marginalise those stakeholders whose support they need for establishing stable definitions of ‘corporate responsibility’. We conclude by discussing whether or not post-partnership strategies, despite this paradox, can be expected to establish stable definitions of ‘corporate responsibility’.
University
University of Gothenburg. School of Business, Economics and Law
Institution
Gothenburg Research Institute
Publisher
Springer
Electronic version
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10551-006-9104-7
Journal title
Journal of Business Ethics
Volume
70
Issue
2
Start page
175
End page
189
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2007Author
Egels-Zandén, Niklas
Wahlqvist, Evelina
Keywords
actor–network theory (ANT)
Business Social Compliance Initiative (BSCI)
codes of conduct
corporate responsibility
garment industry
institutional theory
supplier relations
Publication type
article, peer reviewed scientific
Language
eng