Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of boxes
- List of abbreviations
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Foreword
- Why This Book Matters!
- The Ten Principles of the United Nations Global Compact
- 1 Introduction: the United Nations Global Compact – retrospect and prospect
- Part I Achievements, trends and challenges: reflections on the Principles
- Part II Participants and engagement mechanisms
- 7 Implementing the United Nations Global Compact
- 8 Academic institutions and the United Nations Global Compact: the Principles for Responsible Management Education
- 9 Corporate responsibility and the business school agenda
- 10 NGOs and the United Nations Global Compact: the link between civil society and corporations
- 11 Financial markets and the United Nations Global Compact: the Principles for Responsible Investment
- 12 Learning from the Roundtables on the Sustainable Enterprise Economy: the United Nations Global Compact and the next ten years
- 13 The United Nations Global Compact as a learning approach
- Part III Governance and Communication on Progress
- Part IV Local Networks: the emerging global–local link
- Glossary
- Bibliography
- Index
9 - Corporate responsibility and the business school agenda
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of boxes
- List of abbreviations
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Foreword
- Why This Book Matters!
- The Ten Principles of the United Nations Global Compact
- 1 Introduction: the United Nations Global Compact – retrospect and prospect
- Part I Achievements, trends and challenges: reflections on the Principles
- Part II Participants and engagement mechanisms
- 7 Implementing the United Nations Global Compact
- 8 Academic institutions and the United Nations Global Compact: the Principles for Responsible Management Education
- 9 Corporate responsibility and the business school agenda
- 10 NGOs and the United Nations Global Compact: the link between civil society and corporations
- 11 Financial markets and the United Nations Global Compact: the Principles for Responsible Investment
- 12 Learning from the Roundtables on the Sustainable Enterprise Economy: the United Nations Global Compact and the next ten years
- 13 The United Nations Global Compact as a learning approach
- Part III Governance and Communication on Progress
- Part IV Local Networks: the emerging global–local link
- Glossary
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
A situation of real failure
In times of an acute moral and material crisis such as the one we are witnessing today, it is a very sobering experience to come across work dating from years ago where the tendencies which eventually led to the present crisis had been clearly identified. One such sobering read is the autumn 2002 issue of Administrative Science Quarterly. A large section of that issue was dedicated to a discussion on the role of the organization in society, and the function of teaching and research in this. An article by Hinings and Greenwood (2002) first gives a historical overview of the times when there was no Organization Theory but a budding discipline called Sociology of Organizations. Soon, however, the sociological focus was lost, giving way to more pragmatic, managerial perspectives. The Sociology of Organizations, a discipline dedicated to the understanding of a system, moved towards what in a rather unfortunate choice of terminology is today frequently called ‘Management Science’, often dedicated to pragmatic questions of ‘usefulness’. The viability of this trend was questioned by the authors contributing to the issue: ‘In particular, the question of consequences, i.e., efficient and effective for whom?, is usually left unasked’ (Hinings and Greenwood 2002: 413).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The United Nations Global CompactAchievements, Trends and Challenges, pp. 161 - 181Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010
- 2
- Cited by