企业社会责任映射:瑞士利益相关者的突出,关注和道德

S. Looser, W. Wehrmeyer
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引用次数: 10

摘要

瑞士以前对企业社会责任(CSR)的研究很少尝试识别实际和潜在的利益相关者及其对这一主题的不同贡献。使用利益相关者地图方法,显示权力,紧迫性,合法性,以及不同行为者的关注,本文调查了瑞士企业社会责任的现状。为了得出这张地图,我们研究了公开可用的文件,并对主要利益相关者(消费者、媒体、政府、工会、非营利组织(NPOs)、银行、认证机构和顾问)和不同公司(跨国企业(MNEs)、中小企业(SMEs)和大型国有公司)的管理层进行了27次采访。使用MAXQDA,权力、合法性和紧迫性的量化代码被转换为利益相关者的优先级,换句话说,转换为地图上的位置。此外,访谈中给出的不同企业社会责任利益的代码和文件分析的结果在利益相关者之间联系起来。使用VennMaker对确定的关注点和优先事项进行了关于中心性和显著性的定量分析。本文发现,中小企业、跨国公司和合作的非营利组织是最重要的利益相关者。因此,瑞士的CSR主要不是由监管机构、市场压力或客户驱动的。进一步的网络参数证实了中小企业的重要性,同时遵循一种非常规的非正式,但创新,充满活力和实用的企业社会责任方法,其出现的原因与传统议程的发展不同。事实上,调查结果可能指向了瑞士企业所扮演的非常不同且高度复杂的角色,体现在民主决策和废除等级制度,握手而不是正式合同,以及各方面的透明度(例如绩效指标,工资和奖金)。因此,作为企业社会责任相关研究的新立场和新论点,本文认为“非正式”并不意味着“弱”。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
CSR Mapping: Swiss Stakeholder Salience, Concerns, and Ethics
Previous research on Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) in Switzerland has made few attempts to identify actual and potential stakeholders and their diverging contributions to this topic.Using stakeholder map methodology, showing power, urgency, legitimacy, and concerns of different actors, the paper investigates the current state of Swiss CSR. To derive this map, publicly available documents were explored, augmented by 27 interviews with key stakeholders (consumers, media, government, trade unions, Non-Profit Organisations (NPOs), banks, certifiers, and consultants) and management of different companies (Multinational Enterprises (MNEs), Small- and Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs), and large national companies).Using MAXQDA, the quantified codes given for power, legitimacy, and urgency were transferred into stakeholder priorities or, in other words, into positions in the map. Further, the codes given in the interviews for different CSR interests and the results from the document analysis were linked between stakeholders. The identified concerns and priorities were quantitatively analysed in regard to centrality and salience using VennMaker.The paper found SMEs, MNEs, and cooperating NPOs as being the most significant stakeholders. Swiss CSR is therefore not primarily driven by regulators, market pressure, or customers. Further network parameters substantiated the importance of SMEs while following an unconventionally informal, but innovative, vibrant, and practical CSR approach, emerging for reasons alter than conventional agendas are supposed to evolve. In fact, the findings may point at a very different and highly sophisticated role businesses have adopted in Switzerland, manifesting in democratic decisions and abolished hierarchies, handshakes instead of formal contracts, and transparency in all respects (e.g. performance indicators, salaries, and bonuses).Hence, as a new stance and argument within CSR related research, this paper concludes that “informal” does not mean “weak”.
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