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1 - Introduction: The Centrality of Regulation in Corporate Responsibility

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 June 2023

Onyeka K. Osuji
Affiliation:
University of Essex
Franklin N. Ngwu
Affiliation:
Pan-Atlantic University Lagos Business School, Nigeria
Gary Lynch-Wood
Affiliation:
University of Manchester School of Law
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Summary

This chapter introduces the book and its inspiration, mission, central research questions and structure. It links the effectiveness of corporate social responsibility (CSR) to better understanding of its interdependent relationship with law, regulation and governance. The chapter shows that the book is unconstrained by conventional understandings and the neo-liberal voluntarism orthodoxy of some disciplines in suggesting opportunities for tackling substantive and procedural barriers for CSR in public international law, private international law and national law. It underlines the need for contextualism and a spectrum for possible legal and regulatory intermediation in fifteen ingredients of CSR.

Type
Chapter
Information
Corporate Social Responsibility Across the Globe
Innovative Resolution of Regulatory and Governance Challenges
, pp. 1 - 8
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2023

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References

Dahlsrud, A. (2008). How corporate social responsibility is defined: an analysis of 37 definitions. Corporate Social Responsibility and Environmental Management, 15(1), 113.Google Scholar
Garriga, E. and Melé, D. (2004). Corporate social responsibility theories: mapping the territory. Journal of Business Ethics, 53, 5171.Google Scholar
Llewellyn, K. (1930). A realistic jurisprudence – the next step. Columbia Law Review, 30(4), 431–65.Google Scholar
Okoye, A. (2009). Theorising corporate social responsibility as an essentially contested concept: Is a definition necessary? Journal of Business Ethics, 89(4):613627.Google Scholar
Osuji, O.K. (2015). Corporate social responsibility, juridification and globalization: ‘inventive interventionism’ for a ‘paradox’. International Journal of Law in Context, 11, 265–98.Google Scholar

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