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Corporate Social Capital and Liability (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1999)
Loot Price: R5,510
Discovery Miles 55 100
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Corporate Social Capital and Liability (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1999)
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Total price: R5,520
Discovery Miles: 55 200
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What enables some organizations to routinely perform better than
others? Conversely, what makes some firms consistently perform
worse than their competitors? Within a single corporation, what
enables some teams or individual firm members to outperform their
counterparts? Through the concept of social capital, this book
addresses these questions by studying the effects of relationship
networks on the ability of corporate players (firms and their
members) to attain their professional goals. The idea of social
capital has become one of the premier approaches to studying
networks in the context of organizations but the literature still
lacks a conceptual paradigm that connects the various approaches,
definitions and measure of social capital into an integrated
analytical model. By explicitly connecting social networks to the
goals of corporate players, this book provides a unifying framework
to the study of social capital in an organizational context. In
this volume 'social capital' is defined as the resources that
accrue to an actor through his or her social relationships and that
aid in the attainment of goals.The book introduces the new notion
of 'social liability' as a framework to analyze the negative
effects social networks can have on the attainment of goals by
firms and/or their members. Corporate Social Capital and Liability
thus presents a new way to tie together findings and approaches in
the literature by explicitly addressing the distinction between
networks and outcomes, the distinction between networks at the
level of firms and networks at the level of individuals, and the
distinction between positive outcomes of social structure (social
capital) and negative outcomes (social liability). The book's
contributors are forty-six acclaimed scholars from around the world
with backgrounds in management, business and sociology. Together,
they describe how social relationships within and between firms
positively affect the ability of corporations to achieve fruitful
alliances; gain access to information, resources, knowledge and
financial capital; and recruit qualified personnel. The book makes
an explicit distinction between networks at the level of firms and
networks at the level of individuals.The outcomes of networks are
also considered at these different analytical levels by addressing
such questions as: how do social relationships between firms assist
firms and individuals in the attainment of their goals? How do
these relationships obstruct goals? What is the effect of networks
between individuals (within and between firms) on the performance
of these individuals and the firms they work for? Can networks be
managed to yield social capital rather than social liability? The
unifying framework of social capital and social liability is
helpful in studying business enterprises, and also useful in other
disciplines which analyze social networks and organizations, such
as community studies, economics, and political science.
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