Labour market integration in an MNC- Crafting social sustainability from below
Abstract
The growing demand of corporations to take social responsibility for their businesses has
contributed to a spectrum of corporate social responsibility literature. Though how companies
actually operationalise social sustainability is less established. Informed by institutional
entrepreneurship theory this paper examines how novel practices of social sustainability are
created in the context of multinational corporations. Previous research has found that corporate
social responsibility and social sustainability initiatives are reliant on actors’ own initiatives, often
multi-scalar, dependent on relations, which can be carried out by actors in collectives. The paper
used a qualitative approach and data was collected through 22 semi-structured interviews with
production-managers, HR-managers, CSR-managers, participants of VEP-Production and external
partners. In total, four observations were conducted as well as a focus group with participants. By
using the process of institutional entrepreneurship as a lens, this paper shows how actors come
together as collective of institutional entrepreneurs and creates this novel social recruitment
channel as a result of a) their features b) their ability to mobilize resources and c) encouraging and
maintaining the new method. Hence social sustainability is operationalized by the creation of a
new recruitment channel bridging talent management and labour market integration and this paper
reveals how actors work as a coalition leveraging their agency, resources and own embeddedness
to carry out change.
Degree
Master 2-years
Other description
MSc in Management
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2021-06-29Author
Thynell, Amanda
Öjeskär, Olivia
Keywords
institutional entrepreneurship
social sustainability
multi-scalar
collective change
Series/Report no.
Master Degree Project
2021:108
Language
eng