|
Showing 1 - 8 of
8 matches in All Departments
This book offers 32 texts and case studies from across a wide range
of business sectors around a managerial framework for Sustainable
Business. The case studies are developed for and tested in
executive education programmes at leading business schools. The
book is based on the premise that the key for managing the
sustainable business is finding the right balance over time between
managing competitiveness and profitability AND managing the context
of the business with its political, social and ecological risks and
opportunities. In that way, a sustainable business is highly
responsive to the demands and challenges from both markets and
societies and managers embrace the complexity, ambivalence and
uncertainty that goes along with this approach. The book presents a
framework that facilitates the adoption of best business practice.
This framework leads executives through a systematic approach of
strategic analysis and business planning in risk management, issues
management, stakeholder management, sustainable business
development and strategic differentiation, business model
innovation and developing dynamic capabilities. The approach helps
broaden the understanding of what sustainable performance means, by
protecting business value against sustainability risks and creating
business value from sustainability opportunities.
Can businesses abandon the axiom that the customer is always
right when consumers start questioning the ethics of business
practices? Professor Craig Smith examines the theory and practice
of ethical purchase behaviour, a crucial mechanism for ensuring
social responsibility in business. He explains how and why
consumers have used their purchasing power to influence corporate
policies and practices. He argues the case for the social control
of business, drawing on perspectives from marketing, economics,
politics, sociology, and business policy. He concludes that the
market may act as an arbiter of good and bad business practice. Dr
Smith considers the practical aspects of ethical purchase
behaviour, focusing on consumer boycotts as a specific form of this
consumer behaviour, and explains how boycotted businesses should
respond. This title, first published in 1990, is ideal for both
business students and those who have a business of their own. "
This book offers 32 texts and case studies from across a wide range
of business sectors around a managerial framework for Sustainable
Business. The case studies are developed for and tested in
executive education programmes at leading business schools. The
book is based on the premise that the key for managing the
sustainable business is finding the right balance over time between
managing competitiveness and profitability AND managing the context
of the business with its political, social and ecological risks and
opportunities. In that way, a sustainable business is highly
responsive to the demands and challenges from both markets and
societies and managers embrace the complexity, ambivalence and
uncertainty that goes along with this approach. The book presents a
framework that facilitates the adoption of best business practice.
This framework leads executives through a systematic approach of
strategic analysis and business planning in risk management, issues
management, stakeholder management, sustainable business
development and strategic differentiation, business model
innovation and developing dynamic capabilities. The approach helps
broaden the understanding of what sustainable performance means, by
protecting business value against sustainability risks and creating
business value from sustainability opportunities.
Corporate responsibility has gone global. It has secured the
attention of business leaders, governments and NGOs to an
unprecedented extent. Increasingly, it is argued that business must
play a constructive role in addressing massive global challenges.
Business is not responsible for causing most of the problems
associated with, for example, extreme poverty and hunger, child
mortality and HIV/AIDS. However, it is often claimed that business
has a responsibility to help ameliorate many of these problems and,
indeed, it may be the only institution capable of effectively
addressing some of them. Global Challenges in Responsible Business
addresses the implications for business of corporate responsibility
in the context of globalization and the social and environmental
problems we face today. Featuring research from Europe, North
America, Asia and Africa, it focuses on three major themes:
embedding corporate responsibility, corporate responsibility and
marketing, and corporate responsibility in developing countries.
Individuals are generally considered morally responsible for their
actions. Who or what is responsible when those individuals become
part of business organizations? Can we correctly ascribe moral
responsibility to the organization itself? If so, what are the
grounds for this claim and to what extent do the individuals also
remain morally responsible? If not, does moral responsibility fall
entirely to specific individuals within the organization and can
they be readily identified? A perennial question in business ethics
has concerned the extent to which business organizations can be
correctly said to have moral responsibilities and obligations. In
philosophical terms, this is a question of "corporate moral
agency." Whether firms can be said to be moral agents and have the
capacity for moral responsibility has significant practical
consequences. In most legal systems in the world, business firms
are recognized as "persons" with the ability to own property, to
maintain and defend lawsuits, and to self-organize governance
structures. However to recognize that these "business persons" can
also act morally or immorally as organizations would justify the
imposition of other legal constraints and normative expectations on
organizations. In the criminal law, for example, the idea that an
organized firm may itself have criminal culpability is accepted in
many countries (such as the United States) but rejected in others
(such as Germany). This book presents contributions by leading
business scholars in business ethics, philosophy, and related
disciplines to extend our understanding of the "moral
responsibility" of firms.
Corporate responsibility has gone global. It has secured the
attention of business leaders, governments and NGOs to an
unprecedented extent. Increasingly, it is argued that business must
play a constructive role in addressing massive global challenges.
Business is not responsible for causing most of the problems
associated with, for example, extreme poverty and hunger, child
mortality and HIV/AIDS. However, it is often claimed that business
has a responsibility to help ameliorate many of these problems and,
indeed, it may be the only institution capable of effectively
addressing some of them. Global Challenges in Responsible Business
addresses the implications for business of corporate responsibility
in the context of globalization and the social and environmental
problems we face today. Featuring research from Europe, North
America, Asia and Africa, it focuses on three major themes:
embedding corporate responsibility, corporate responsibility and
marketing, and corporate responsibility in developing countries.
Individuals are generally considered morally responsible for their
actions. Who or what is responsible when those individuals become
part of business organizations? Can we correctly ascribe moral
responsibility to the organization itself? If so, what are the
grounds for this claim and to what extent do the individuals also
remain morally responsible? If not, does moral responsibility fall
entirely to specific individuals within the organization and can
they be readily identified? A perennial question in business ethics
has concerned the extent to which business organizations can be
correctly said to have moral responsibilities and obligations. In
philosophical terms, this is a question of "corporate moral
agency." Whether firms can be said to be moral agents and to have
the capacity for moral responsibility has significant practical
consequences. In most legal systems in the world, business firms
are recognized as "persons" with the ability to own property, to
maintain and defend lawsuits, and to self-organize governance
structures. To recognize that these "business persons" can also act
morally or immorally as organizations, however, would justify the
imposition of other legal constraints and normative expectations on
organizations. In the criminal law, for example, the idea that an
organized firm may itself have criminal culpability is accepted in
many countries (such as the United States) but rejected in others
(such as Germany). This book collects new contributions by leading
business scholars in business ethics, philosophy, and related
disciplines to extend our understanding of the "moral
responsibility of firms."
Can businesses abandon the axiom that the customer is always right
when consumers start questioning the ethics of business practices?
Professor Craig Smith examines the theory and practice of ethical
purchase behaviour, a crucial mechanism for ensuring social
responsibility in business. He explains how and why consumers have
used their purchasing power to influence corporate policies and
practices. He argues the case for the social control of business,
drawing on perspectives from marketing, economics, politics,
sociology, and business policy. He concludes that the market may
act as an arbiter of 'good' and 'bad' business practice. Dr Smith
considers the practical aspects of ethical purchase behaviour,
focusing on consumer boycotts as a specific form of this consumer
behaviour, and explains how boycotted businesses should respond.
This title, first published in 1990, is ideal for both business
students and those who have a business of their own.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Hypnotic
Ben Affleck, Alice Braga, …
DVD
R133
Discovery Miles 1 330
|