Isomorphic Mutation and Strategic Adaptation in China’s CSR Standards for Overseas Investors
Ciprian N. Radavoi () and
Yongmin Bian ()
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Ciprian N. Radavoi: School of Law, University of New England (UNE)
Yongmin Bian: School of Law, University of International Business and Economics (UIBE)
A chapter in Responsible Business in a Changing World, 2020, pp 247-270 from Springer
Abstract:
Abstract At the beginning of the present decade, China has shown preoccupation with its overseas investors’ behaviour in fields like labour, human rights or the environment. Comprehensive, OECD-style environmental, social and governance standards were issued in 2012 by the overseas contractors’ association. One year later, however, the government issued specific, sectorial guidelines for the field of environmental protection only. The divide between industry associations’ approach, favouring comprehensive CSR, and the state’s, paying more attention to the field of environment in its guidelines for overseas operations, is also visible in other normative documents. This chapter focuses on the fields of contracting and mining, as among the most prone to environmental and social wrongdoing by corporations. It first reveals the different CSR approaches at government and industry level as paradoxical, since in China, the government is behind the business associations. The chapter then explains the differences using a theoretic framework that combines sociological neo-institutionalism, with its focus on isomorphism and mechanical alignment to taken-for-granted models, with more recent theories focused on agency. In this context, we discuss the suspicion of decoupling, i.e. adoption of policies that look good without a real intent of implementing them.
Date: 2020
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:csrchp:978-3-030-36970-5_15
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DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-36970-5_15
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