Corporate Social Responsibility and International Development
Is Business the Solution?
Cloth: 978 1 84407 356 6
Price: $105.00  

Paper: 978 1 84407 610 9
Price: $38.95  

Publisher: Earthscan Publications Ltd.
November 2008 , 260 pp., 6 1/8" x 9 1/4"
figures, tables & boxes
The business of business is business. So then why should corporations be involved in development? This groundbreaking new book makes the case that that governments and their international agencies grouped under the umbrella of the UN, have failed in their attempts to rid the planet of under-development and poverty. If development is the objective then it seems that the solution and the responsibility lies with the private sector, particularly through the Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) programs of large corporations, with their tremendous power and economic strength.

This book, written by noted CSR practitioner Michael Hopkins, is the first to explicitly link CSR with development. It spells out what corporations are doing on development, what more they could do and how CSR can be a useful tool to promote economic development via corporations. This is important and challenging reading for all of those in government, business and NGOs who think that there must be a better, more effective and dynamic way to kick-start development and eradicate poverty.

Table of Contents:
Preface; 1) Can CSR Pave the Way for Development? 2) What is CSR All About and Where is it Going? 3) Corporate CSR Development Case Studies: Failures and Successes; 4) Failures of Development: A Global View; 5) Corporations Should Abandon Philanthropy and Concentrate on CSR; 6) A Critique of CSR and Development; 7) CSR and Poverty; 8) Supply Chain Issues; 9) CSR in Developing Countries; 10) Limitations of International Agencies; 11) Socially Responsible Investment in Developing Countries; 12) Main Actions for Companies Involved in Development.


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Reviews & Endorsements:
"At last, the case for how big corporations might move beyond charity to meet the 21st century's biggest challenge: poverty. How many more Henry Fords, Bill Gateses and Warren Buffetts are we willing to waste in the shantytowns of the developing world? All they need is what every successful corporation (and democracy) has--business expertise and the legal means to organize and expand productively."
- Hernando de Soto, President of the Institute for Liberty and Democracy, Lima, Peru and author of The Mystery of Capital and The Other Path
"Very readable, well referenced and thought provoking--a very good contribution to the evolving literature of the subject."
- Adrian Payne, Head of CSR, , British American Tobacco