Corporate social responsibility: Lessons from the South on law and business norms
Claire Moore Dickerson
A chapter in Law & Economics: Toward Social Justice, 2009, pp 131-157 from Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Abstract:
Corporate social responsibility describes the role that society expects of business organizations. Because it is difficult to see societal norms in one's own society, comparative law can help us increase the salience of those norms in our own community. Looking at how a set of business laws uniform across 16 West and Central African countries lives in one of the member states, Cameroon, we see that society expresses its norms not only when behavior tracks the positive law, but also, and very importantly, when it diverges from that law. After studying examples of divergence in the South, specifically in the African country Cameroon, the chapter turns to the North. Using the United States as the illustration, and focusing on the role of business entities, the chapter identifies ways of opening the discussion among all political constituents, even those outside the traditional business community.
Date: 2009
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:eme:rlwezz:s0193-5895(2009)0000024010
DOI: 10.1108/S0193-5895(2009)0000024010
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