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dc.contributor.authorMonciardini, David
dc.date.accessioned2016-03-09T11:22:20Z
dc.date.issued2016-05-10
dc.description.abstractThis contribution focuses on the relation between CSR ideas and policies. On the basis of a series of interviews and documents’ analyses, it identifies three professional élites - activist-lawyers; financial analysts; and international accountants - as the “architects” of the current debate on CSR policies, in the EU context. The author questions why and how they succeeded in shaping the public debate on business social and environmental accountability. He claims that their views on CSR are underpinned by rather different underlying rationales, coming from Law, Finance, and Accountancy, and by distinct professional interests. The chapter shows how these actors used these arguments to push their (partially) competing agendas and professional claims. In particular, the paper focuses on the impact of these professions on the European regulatory debate on social and environmental reporting, as a lens to study these distinct approaches. The conclusions highlight the need for a more reflexive sociological approach to CSR, which would reveal and openly discuss the co-existence - under the officialized story - of different rationales and interests. As different ideas about what CSR is would have major social, economic and environmental implications, it also suggests that advances in CSR depend also from the ability of law- and policy-makers to design a regulatory framework that would reconcile these different instances.en_GB
dc.identifier.citationAwaiting citation and DOIen_GB
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10871/20632
dc.language.isoenen_GB
dc.publisherSpringer Internationalen_GB
dc.titleThe rationales of lawyers, accountants and financial analysts in shaping the EU agenda on CSRen_GB
dc.typeBook chapteren_GB
dc.date.available2016-03-09T11:22:20Z
dc.contributor.editorVertigans, S
dc.contributor.editorIdowu, S
dc.relation.isPartOfCorporate Social Responsibility: Academic Insights and Impacts
dc.descriptionChapter accepted for publication in collection to be published by Springer. Publication details not yet available.en_GB


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