Our collaborator on the forthcoming second edition of our CSR textbook, Laura Spence from Royal Holloway, University of London, has been musing recently on the future of CSR. So we asked her to pen another guest post for us about where she thinks things are going. Here's what her crystal ball says...
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I’ll let you into a secret. Sometimes,
as I travel from conference to conference, I wonder if we are getting anywhere
at all in the study of CSR. As the field
has developed, there are some topics and theories which have somewhat of a stranglehold
on our thinking. With every new conference presentation that yet again tackles
the well-trodden ground of large, Western multinational corporations, corporate
social performance, stakeholder theory, or institutional theory, my heart sinks
a little, though I also work on some of these. Don’t get me wrong, there is
plenty of good work on these topics coming out, but we are in danger of
throwing all our energies at an ever-decreasing circle of subjects when there
is so much more out there to do. Couple that with the assessment by some that CSR has come to
its natural end and it is sometimes hard to stay positive for the future of
CSR.
And yet, in the last few weeks, I have
had to rethink my doubts. It all started with an event on Gender and
Responsible Business at Nottingham University’s International Centre for
Corporate Social Responsibility. Somehow CSR – of all subjects - has more
or less overlooked the gender perspective despite some pretty long standing powerful
contributions. Every presentation I saw
contributed something refreshing, different and relevant, demonstrating a huge
potential to shine a new light on CSR in the future. It is well worth joining
the continuing conversation through the LinkedIn group: ‘Gender &
Responsible Business Network’.
The inclusion of marginalized voices was
to my delight also explored at the ‘Corporate Responsibility: Towards Inclusive
Development’ stream at the European Group of
Organization Studies (EGOS) conference in Montreal. In a field dominated by US and European
corporate perspectives and authors, this stream surfaced a young, vibrant and
diverse group of scholars working on regions that constitute most of the world
but a small proportion of CSR publications. We heard about CSR in Asian, South
American, Middle Eastern and African countries, drawing on important cultural,
political, economic, social and religious perspectives that are usually
sidelined. Is the future of CSR in Europe or North America? I doubt it. The
level of social need, different governmental roles, critical challenges and
changing economic structures in developing and emerging economies
should encourage us to look well beyond the usual contexts.
And I was not the only one pondering the
future of CSR. At a special workshop at the EGOS conference, Christopher
Wickert (VU University Amsterdam) and Arno Kourula (University of Amsterdam)
led a focused workshop ‘Debating
the Future of CSR’. Bringing together PhD students and
early career researchers (and let’s face it, they should be the ones that determine what’s around the corner) with a
few more established academics, we had the opportunity to really dig in to
three key aspects: contextuality in CSR; theoretical criticism of CSR; and stakeholder
perspectives and marginalized voices in CSR. The topics discussed were wide
ranging and included the role of non-governmental organizations, CSR as a
political project, activism, the role of the state, frustration with the
‘business case’, the performativity of language around CSR, listening to the
polyphony of voices and the dangers of
stereotyping. I really hope that the participants
at the workshop go on to publish on some of these perspectives in more detail –
it will make fascinating reading.
Some of these waves of CSR research are
captured in an earlier Crane
and Matten blog and a brand new chapter in our second edition of CSR: Readings and Cases in A Global Context
(Crane, Matten & Spence, Routledge, July 2013). There we add to the debate
on the future of CSR in terms of new business models such as social
entrepreneurship and social innovation, the influence of new social movements,
forms of regulatory rather than voluntary CSR, the outcomes of CSR, and the positive
prospects of CSR as a profession and an academic subject.
So, as summer starts in earnest in the
UK, I am optimistic for the future of CSR. If space is made for the rising
waves of research I have been privileged to see in the last few months, you
never know, we might actually make a difference.