The Processes of Defining Corporate Responsibility: A Study of Swedish Garment Retailers' Responsibility
Abstract
Despite extensive research on corporate responsibility, little research exists on how the
inter-organisational processes of defining corporate responsibility develop. In this paper,
we present a framework based on Actor-Network Theory (ANT) for analysing these
processes. The developed framework is illustrated in a study of the redefinition of
Swedish garment retailers’ responsibilities for workers’ rights at suppliers’ factories
between 1996 and 2004. We show that definition processes can be characterised as
battles for the right to interpretation, and that traditionally non-dominant actors can, at
least temporarily, win these battles and dictate the development of the processes for
defining corporate responsibility. We also show that definition processes can take an
exclusionary form prohibiting certain actors from participating.
University
University of Gothenburg
Institution
Gothenburg Research Institute (GRI) & Företagsekonomiska institutionen, Studier av organisation och samhälle
Publisher
Wiley InterScience
Citation
The original publication is available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/bse.514
Collections
Date
2008Author
Ählström, Jenny
Egels-Zandén, Niklas
Keywords
actor-network theory
ANT
codes of conduct
corporate responsibility
CSR
garment industry
Publication type
article, peer reviewed scientific
ISSN
0964-4733
Series/Report no.
Business Strategy and the Environment
in press
Language
eng