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Corporate social entrepreneurship

A corporate social entrepreneur (CSE) is someone who attempts to advance a social agenda in addition to a formal job role as part of a corporation. It is possible for CSEs to work in organizational contexts that are favourable to corporate social responsibility (CSR). CSEs focus on developing both social capital and economic capital, and their formal job role may not always align with corporate social responsibility. A person in a non-executive or managerial position can still be considered a CSE.[1][2]

Relevance edit

CSE is a multi-disciplinary scientific sub-field relating to the fields of corporate social responsibility and sustainability. It has relevance in the context of business and management, specifically in areas such as business ethics, sustainability, organizational behavior, entrepreneurship, human resource management and business strategy. The concept has intersections with sociology, anthropology, social psychology and philosophy.[3]

The social entrepreneurship literature has largely concentrated on the voluntary, not-for-profit, or "third" sector. In the for-profit context, the social entrepreneur is traditionally perceived as a philanthropic agent or business owner.[2][4] In the UK, the corporation is defined by the company’s directors and shareholders in its articles of association, requiring employees to deliver returns to shareholders, through their job roles.[5] The exception to this might be the UK’s Co-operative Group, which describes its business as guided by a social mission and is not responsible to shareholders for delivering profit.

CSE is unlikely to have the time or other resources to commit full-scale due to organizational constraints. Hence, corporate social entrepreneurship is characterized by its informality.[6] The entrepreneurial discretion that is required to perform it is controversial.[7] Activity done by CSEs varied across the domains of CSR.[8]

Background edit

CSE was initially described in 2002 in a theoretical working paper published in the Hull University Business School Research Memoranda Series.[9] The paper argued that personal values could also motivate CSR (and sustainability), along with more apparent economic and macro-political drivers. This reflected traditional business ethics and the philosophical debate on moral agency.[10][11] The paper was then followed by a UK conference paper, published the following year in the Journal of Business Ethics,[12] which discussed the significance of managerial discretion in CSR.

The term "corporate social entrepreneur" was first used in a paper presented during the 17th Annual European Business Ethics Network Conference held in June 2004.[13] The term "corporate social entrepreneur" was defined and distinguished from other types of entrepreneurs, such as executive entrepreneurs, intrapreneurs (Pinchot, 1985), policy entrepreneurs, and public or social entrepreneur.[14][13] The term initially referred to managers. However, employee inclusion was later extended to all levels of the firm.[1]

Dr. Christine A. Hemingway developed the idea of CSE after her stint as a marketing executive in the corporate sector.[3] The notion was also inspired by Wood, who had previously referred to "Ethical training, cultural background, preferences…and life experiences…that motivate human behavior".[15][16]

Business ethics edit

Embezzlement of social entrepreneurial funds is not unheard of, nor are generally unethical business practices being covered up by robust social entrepreneurial programs.[17][18] Many businesses conduct social entrepreneurship for the sake of public relations.[19] Social corporate entrepreneurship activity has yet to be quantified on any objective scale.[20] There is some evidence that supports the idea that businesses that are ethical, as reported by their employees, are performing better than those that are not.[21] This evidence is joined by other evidence which suggests that employees tend to leave companies that they do not view as behaving ethically.[22] CSE has been described as a manifestation of enlightened self-interest.[14][23][24] Alternatively, a deontological viewpoint frames acts of socially responsible behavior as driven by the individual's sense of duty to society, which may be viewed in terms of altruism.[12][25]

Research edit

Summers and Dyck (2011) described the abstract stages of CSE as: first socialization, or the conception of a socially beneficial idea. Second externalization, developing the idea into a concrete plan. Third integration, making the idea a reality. Finally, fourth is internalization, or establishing socially beneficial practices in the company.[26]

Some studies have shown a positive relationship between CSR and financial performance,[27] others regard the picture as more nuanced.[28] Consequently, the notion of the corporate social entrepreneur is controversial due to arguments about the role of business and whether or not CSR helps financial performance, and because the concept of employee discretion has been considered a key factor in moral character (in the ancient philosophical sense).[29] Some unethical behavior is sometimes acknowledged as an outcome of discretion and agency; corporate irresponsibility is regarded as insufficient.[7] This is of particular relevance in the global financial crisis of 2008, caused by financial irregularities and lapses in corporate governance. These have produced some calls to move beyond capitalism.[30] Individuals closely related between the financial objectives of a company and public well-being sometimes referred to as Social Intraprenuers.[31][32] Hemingway (2013) referred to the synonymous nature of the two terms: intrapreneur (Pinchot, 1985) and corporate entrepreneur.[33]

The value system that is employed within an organization plays a large role in the emergence of corporate social entrepreneurs.[34] Moreover, the sustainability of social intrapreneurship ventures has been called into question by critics. Socially beneficial ventures often struggles in the short term, leading to hesitance from investors.[35]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Hemingway 2013b.
  2. ^ a b Austin, James; Stevenson, Howard; Wei-Skillern, Jane (2012). "Social and commercial entrepreneurship: Same, different, or both?". Revista de Administração. 47 (3): 370–384. doi:10.5700/rausp1055.
  3. ^ a b Hemingway 2013a.
  4. ^ Thompson, John L. (2002). "The world of the social entrepreneur". International Journal of Public Sector Management. 15 (5): 412–431. doi:10.1108/09513550210435746.
  5. ^ "Model articles of association for limited companies". GOV.UK. 10 October 2017.
  6. ^ Hemingway, Christine A. (2013). Corporate Social Entrepreneurship: Integrity Within. Cambridge University Press. pp. 119–192. ISBN 978-1-107-44719-6.
  7. ^ a b Hemingway 2005.
  8. ^ Hemingway 2013a, Chapters 8, 9.
  9. ^ Hemingway, C.A., An Exploratory Analysis of Corporate Social Responsibility: Definitions, Motives and Values, Research Memorandum No. 34, University of Hull Business School. 2002. ISBN 1-902034-24-4
  10. ^ Lovell, Alan (2002). "Moral agency as victim of the vulnerability of autonomy". Business Ethics: A European Review. 11: 62–76. doi:10.1111/1467-8608.00259.
  11. ^ Maclagan 1998.
  12. ^ a b Hemingway, Christine A.; Maclagan, Patrick W. (2004). "Managers' Personal Values as Drivers of Corporate Social Responsibility". Journal of Business Ethics. 50 (1): 33–44. doi:10.1023/B:BUSI.0000020964.80208.c9. JSTOR 25123191. S2CID 154889970.
  13. ^ a b Hemingway, C.A., Personal Values as the Catalyst for the Corporate Social Entrepreneur. 17th Annual European Business Ethics Network (EBEN) Conference ('Ethics and Entrepreneurship', University of Twente, Enschede, The Netherlands, 24/26 June 2004
  14. ^ a b Austin, James; Stevenson, Howard; Wei-Skillern, Jane (2006). "Social and Commercial Entrepreneurship: Same, Different, or Both?". Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice. 30: 1–22. doi:10.1111/j.1540-6520.2006.00107.x. S2CID 154727792.
  15. ^ Wood, Donna J. (1991). "Corporate Social Performance Revisited". The Academy of Management Review. 16 (4): 691–718. doi:10.5465/amr.1991.4279616. hdl:10068/100015. JSTOR 258977.
  16. ^ Trevino, Linda Klebe (1986). "Ethical Decision Making in Organizations: A Person-Situation Interactionist Model". Academy of Management Review. 11 (3): 601–617. doi:10.5465/amr.1986.4306235.
  17. ^ Jones Christensen, Lisa; Mackey, Alison; Whetten, David (1 May 2014). "Taking Responsibility for Corporate Social Responsibility: The Role of Leaders in Creating, Implementing, Sustaining, or Avoiding Socially Responsible Firm Behaviors". Academy of Management Perspectives. 28 (2): 164–178. doi:10.5465/amp.2012.0047.
  18. ^ Dejardin, Marcus; Laurent, Hélène (April 2016). The Ambivalent Effect of Corruption on Entrepreneurship and Economic Development. International OFEL Conference on Governance, Management and Entrepreneurship. Zagreb. pp. 903–924. ProQuest 1803688400.
  19. ^ Chell, Elizabeth; Spence, Laura J.; Perrini, Francesco; Harris, Jared D. (1 February 2016). "Social Entrepreneurship and Business Ethics: Does Social Equal Ethical?". Journal of Business Ethics. 133 (4): 619–625. doi:10.1007/s10551-014-2439-6.
  20. ^ Kuratko, Donald F.; McMullen, Jeffery S.; Hornsby, Jeffrey S.; Jackson, Chad (1 May 2017). "Is your organization conducive to the continuous creation of social value? Toward a social corporate entrepreneurship scale". Business Horizons. 60 (3): 271–283. doi:10.1016/j.bushor.2016.12.003. S2CID 157716734.
  21. ^ Ogbari, Mercy Ejovwokeoghene; Oke, Adunola Oluremi; Ibukunoluwa, Adeyemo A.; Ajagbe, Musibau Akintunde; Ologbo, Andrew Cat (12 June 2016). "Entrepreneurship and Business Ethics: Implications on Corporate Performance". International Journal of Economics and Financial Issues. 6 (3S): 50–58. ProQuest 1809615223.
  22. ^ Low, Mei Peng (2017). Linking Entrepreneurial Orientation and Internal Corporate Social Responsibility to Employees' Intention to Leave in Small Medium Sized Enterprises: The case of Malaysia (Thesis).
  23. ^ Austin, J.; Leonard, H.; Reficco, E. and Wei-Skillern, J. in Social Entrepreneurship: New Models of Sustainable Social Change A. Nicholls, ed., Oxford University Press, Oxford. 2006b, pp. 169 – 181.
  24. ^ Austin, J.; Leonard, H; Reficco, E. and Wei-Skillern, J. in The Accountable Corporation: Corporate Social Responsibility Volume 3 M. Epstein and K. Hanson, eds., Praeger, Westport, CT. 2006c, pp.237 – 247.
  25. ^ Hemingway 2013a, p. 49-50.
  26. ^ Summers, Donald B.; Dyck, Bruno (2011). "A Process Model of Social Intrapreneurship within a For-Profit Company: First Community Bank". Social and Sustainable Entrepreneurship. Advances in Entrepreneurship, Firm Emergence and Growth. Vol. 13. pp. 139–174. doi:10.1108/S1074-7540(2011)0000013010. ISBN 978-1-78052-072-8.
  27. ^ Orlitzky, Marc; Schmidt, Frank L.; Rynes, Sara L. (2003). "Corporate Social and Financial Performance: A Meta-Analysis". Organization Studies. 24 (3): 403–441. doi:10.1177/0170840603024003910. S2CID 8460439.
  28. ^ Barnett, Michael L. (2007). "Stakeholder Influence Capacity and the Variability of Financial Returns to Corporate Social Responsibility". The Academy of Management Review. 32 (3): 794–816. doi:10.5465/amr.2007.25275520. JSTOR 20159336. S2CID 167584731.
  29. ^ Rabinow, P. (ed.), Michael Foucault Ethics: Subjectivity and Truth, Essential Works of Foucault 1954–1984 Volume 1, Penguin, London. 2000.
  30. ^ Mason, P. PostCapitalism: A Guide to Our Future, Penguin, London. 2015
  31. ^ "A guide to 'social intrapreneurs' and where to find them". TheGuardian.com. 31 January 2011.
  32. ^ Venn, Ronald; Berg, Nicola (2013). "Building competitive advantage through social intrapreneurship". South Asian Journal of Global Business Research. 2: 104–127. doi:10.1108/20454451311303310.
  33. ^ Hemingway 2013a, p. 86.
  34. ^ Austin; Reficco, James; Ezequiel. "Corporate Social Entrepreneurship" (PDF).{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  35. ^ Venn, Ronald; Berg, Nicola (2013). "Building competitive advantage through social intrapreneurship". South Asian Journal of Global Business Research. 2 (1): 104–127. doi:10.1108/20454451311303310.

Bibliography edit

  • Archer, M.S., Being Human: The Problem of Agency, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. 2000.
  • Austin, James; Stevenson, Howard; Wei–Skillern, Jane (January 2006). "Social and Commercial Entrepreneurship: Same, Different, or Both?". Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice. 30 (1): 1–22. doi:10.1111/j.1540-6520.2006.00107.x. S2CID 154642522.
  • Austin, J.; Leonard, H.; Reficco, E. and Wei-Skillern, J. Social Entrepreneurship: It is for Corporations too in Social Entrepreneurship: New Models of Sustainable Social Change A. Nicholls, ed., Oxford University Press, Oxford. 2006b, pp. 169 – 181.
  • Austin, J.; Leonard, H; Reficco, E. and Wei-Skillern, J. Corporate Social Entrepreneurship: A New Vision for CSR in The Accountable Corporation: Corporate Social Responsibility Volume 3 M. Epstein and K. Hanson, eds., Praeger, Westport, CT. 2006c, pp. 237 – 247.
  • Bierhoff, H.-W., Prosocial Behaviour, Psychology Press, Hove. 2002.
  • Crane, Andrew; McWilliams, Abagail; Matten, Dirk; Moon; Moon, Jeremy; Siegal, Donald S., eds. (2010). Business Ethics A European Perspective: Managing Corporate Citizenship and Sustainability in the Age of Globalization (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199211593.
  • Drumwright, M.E., Socially Responsible Organisational Buying: Environmental Concern as a Noneconomic Buying Criterion. Journal of Marketing 58[July], 1–19. 1994.
  • Fisher, C. and Lovell, A., Business Ethics and Values, 2nd ed., Pearson Education, Harlow, U.K. 2006.
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  • Hemingway, C.A., Personal Values as the Catalyst for the Corporate Social Entrepreneur. 17th Annual European Business Ethics Network (EBEN) Conference (‘Ethics and Entrepreneurship’), University of Twente, Enschede, The Netherlands, 24/26 June 2004.
  • Hemingway, C.A. (2005). "Personal Values as a Catalyst for Corporate Social Entrepreneurship". Journal of Business Ethics. 60 (3): 233–249. doi:10.1007/s10551-005-0132-5. S2CID 145365066.
  • Hemingway, C.A., What Determines Corporate Social Entrepreneurship? Antecedents and Consequences, Conditions and Character Traits. Presented at the PhD Workshop, ‘CSR and Sustainable Business’, School of Management and Entrepreneurship, Katholieke Universitat Leuven, Belgium, 5 May 2006.
  • Hemingway, C.A. (2013a). Corporate Social Entrepreneurship: Integrity Within. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-44719-6.
  • Hemingway, Christine A. (2013b). "Corporate Social Entrepreneurship". In Idowu, S.O.; Capaldi, N.; Zu, L.; Das Gupta, A. (eds.). Encyclopedia of Corporate Social Responsibility. Springer-Verlag. pp. 544–551. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-28036-8_363. ISBN 978-3-642-28036-8.
  • Hemingway, C.A. and Maclagan, P.W. (2003), Managers' Individual Discretion and Corporate Social Responsibility: the Relevance of Personal Values. 7th European Business Ethics Network (EBEN- UK) U.K. Annual Conference, and the 5th Ethics and Human Resource Management Conference, Selwyn College, Cambridge, 7–8 April 2003. ISBN 1-84233-087-X.
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  • Kohlberg, L., in Handbook of Socialization Theory and Research D.A. Goslin, ed., Rand McNally, Chicago. 1969, pp. 347–480.
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corporate, social, entrepreneurship, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, tone, style, reflect, encyclopedic, tone, used, wikipedia, wikipedia. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions January 2016 Learn how and when to remove this message This article may rely excessively on sources too closely associated with the subject potentially preventing the article from being verifiable and neutral Please help improve it by replacing them with more appropriate citations to reliable independent third party sources January 2016 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message A corporate social entrepreneur CSE is someone who attempts to advance a social agenda in addition to a formal job role as part of a corporation It is possible for CSEs to work in organizational contexts that are favourable to corporate social responsibility CSR CSEs focus on developing both social capital and economic capital and their formal job role may not always align with corporate social responsibility A person in a non executive or managerial position can still be considered a CSE 1 2 Contents 1 Relevance 2 Background 3 Business ethics 4 Research 5 See also 6 References 7 BibliographyRelevance editCSE is a multi disciplinary scientific sub field relating to the fields of corporate social responsibility and sustainability It has relevance in the context of business and management specifically in areas such as business ethics sustainability organizational behavior entrepreneurship human resource management and business strategy The concept has intersections with sociology anthropology social psychology and philosophy 3 The social entrepreneurship literature has largely concentrated on the voluntary not for profit or third sector In the for profit context the social entrepreneur is traditionally perceived as a philanthropic agent or business owner 2 4 In the UK the corporation is defined by the company s directors and shareholders in its articles of association requiring employees to deliver returns to shareholders through their job roles 5 The exception to this might be the UK s Co operative Group which describes its business as guided by a social mission and is not responsible to shareholders for delivering profit CSE is unlikely to have the time or other resources to commit full scale due to organizational constraints Hence corporate social entrepreneurship is characterized by its informality 6 The entrepreneurial discretion that is required to perform it is controversial 7 Activity done by CSEs varied across the domains of CSR 8 Background editCSE was initially described in 2002 in a theoretical working paper published in the Hull University Business School Research Memoranda Series 9 The paper argued that personal values could also motivate CSR and sustainability along with more apparent economic and macro political drivers This reflected traditional business ethics and the philosophical debate on moral agency 10 11 The paper was then followed by a UK conference paper published the following year in the Journal of Business Ethics 12 which discussed the significance of managerial discretion in CSR The term corporate social entrepreneur was first used in a paper presented during the 17th Annual European Business Ethics Network Conference held in June 2004 13 The term corporate social entrepreneur was defined and distinguished from other types of entrepreneurs such as executive entrepreneurs intrapreneurs Pinchot 1985 policy entrepreneurs and public or social entrepreneur 14 13 The term initially referred to managers However employee inclusion was later extended to all levels of the firm 1 Dr Christine A Hemingway developed the idea of CSE after her stint as a marketing executive in the corporate sector 3 The notion was also inspired by Wood who had previously referred to Ethical training cultural background preferences and life experiences that motivate human behavior 15 16 Business ethics editEmbezzlement of social entrepreneurial funds is not unheard of nor are generally unethical business practices being covered up by robust social entrepreneurial programs 17 18 Many businesses conduct social entrepreneurship for the sake of public relations 19 Social corporate entrepreneurship activity has yet to be quantified on any objective scale 20 There is some evidence that supports the idea that businesses that are ethical as reported by their employees are performing better than those that are not 21 This evidence is joined by other evidence which suggests that employees tend to leave companies that they do not view as behaving ethically 22 CSE has been described as a manifestation of enlightened self interest 14 23 24 Alternatively a deontological viewpoint frames acts of socially responsible behavior as driven by the individual s sense of duty to society which may be viewed in terms of altruism 12 25 Research editSummers and Dyck 2011 described the abstract stages of CSE as first socialization or the conception of a socially beneficial idea Second externalization developing the idea into a concrete plan Third integration making the idea a reality Finally fourth is internalization or establishing socially beneficial practices in the company 26 Some studies have shown a positive relationship between CSR and financial performance 27 others regard the picture as more nuanced 28 Consequently the notion of the corporate social entrepreneur is controversial due to arguments about the role of business and whether or not CSR helps financial performance and because the concept of employee discretion has been considered a key factor in moral character in the ancient philosophical sense 29 Some unethical behavior is sometimes acknowledged as an outcome of discretion and agency corporate irresponsibility is regarded as insufficient 7 This is of particular relevance in the global financial crisis of 2008 caused by financial irregularities and lapses in corporate governance These have produced some calls to move beyond capitalism 30 Individuals closely related between the financial objectives of a company and public well being sometimes referred to as Social Intraprenuers 31 32 Hemingway 2013 referred to the synonymous nature of the two terms intrapreneur Pinchot 1985 and corporate entrepreneur 33 The value system that is employed within an organization plays a large role in the emergence of corporate social entrepreneurs 34 Moreover the sustainability of social intrapreneurship ventures has been called into question by critics Socially beneficial ventures often struggles in the short term leading to hesitance from investors 35 See also editBusiness ethics Corporate governance Corporate social responsibility Entrepreneurship Intrapreneurship Moral agency Moral development Morality Philanthropy Social entrepreneurshipReferences edit a b Hemingway 2013b a b Austin James Stevenson Howard Wei Skillern Jane 2012 Social and commercial entrepreneurship Same different or both Revista de Administracao 47 3 370 384 doi 10 5700 rausp1055 a b Hemingway 2013a Thompson John L 2002 The world of the social entrepreneur International Journal of Public Sector Management 15 5 412 431 doi 10 1108 09513550210435746 Model articles of association for limited companies GOV UK 10 October 2017 Hemingway Christine A 2013 Corporate Social Entrepreneurship Integrity Within Cambridge University Press pp 119 192 ISBN 978 1 107 44719 6 a b Hemingway 2005 Hemingway 2013a Chapters 8 9 Hemingway C A An Exploratory Analysis of Corporate Social Responsibility Definitions Motives and Values Research Memorandum No 34 University of Hull Business School 2002 ISBN 1 902034 24 4 Lovell Alan 2002 Moral agency as victim of the vulnerability of autonomy Business Ethics A European Review 11 62 76 doi 10 1111 1467 8608 00259 Maclagan 1998 a b Hemingway Christine A Maclagan Patrick W 2004 Managers Personal Values as Drivers of Corporate Social Responsibility Journal of Business Ethics 50 1 33 44 doi 10 1023 B BUSI 0000020964 80208 c9 JSTOR 25123191 S2CID 154889970 a b Hemingway C A Personal Values as the Catalyst for the Corporate Social Entrepreneur 17th Annual European Business Ethics Network EBEN Conference Ethics and Entrepreneurship University of Twente Enschede The Netherlands 24 26 June 2004 a b Austin James Stevenson Howard Wei Skillern Jane 2006 Social and Commercial Entrepreneurship Same Different or Both Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice 30 1 22 doi 10 1111 j 1540 6520 2006 00107 x S2CID 154727792 Wood Donna J 1991 Corporate Social Performance Revisited The Academy of Management Review 16 4 691 718 doi 10 5465 amr 1991 4279616 hdl 10068 100015 JSTOR 258977 Trevino Linda Klebe 1986 Ethical Decision Making in Organizations A Person Situation Interactionist Model Academy of Management Review 11 3 601 617 doi 10 5465 amr 1986 4306235 Jones Christensen Lisa Mackey Alison Whetten David 1 May 2014 Taking Responsibility for Corporate Social Responsibility The Role of Leaders in Creating Implementing Sustaining or Avoiding Socially Responsible Firm Behaviors Academy of Management Perspectives 28 2 164 178 doi 10 5465 amp 2012 0047 Dejardin Marcus Laurent Helene April 2016 The Ambivalent Effect of Corruption on Entrepreneurship and Economic Development International OFEL Conference on Governance Management and Entrepreneurship Zagreb pp 903 924 ProQuest 1803688400 Chell Elizabeth Spence Laura J Perrini Francesco Harris Jared D 1 February 2016 Social Entrepreneurship and Business Ethics Does Social Equal Ethical Journal of Business Ethics 133 4 619 625 doi 10 1007 s10551 014 2439 6 Kuratko Donald F McMullen Jeffery S Hornsby Jeffrey S Jackson Chad 1 May 2017 Is your organization conducive to the continuous creation of social value Toward a social corporate entrepreneurship scale Business Horizons 60 3 271 283 doi 10 1016 j bushor 2016 12 003 S2CID 157716734 Ogbari Mercy Ejovwokeoghene Oke Adunola Oluremi Ibukunoluwa Adeyemo A Ajagbe Musibau Akintunde Ologbo Andrew Cat 12 June 2016 Entrepreneurship and Business Ethics Implications on Corporate Performance International Journal of Economics and Financial Issues 6 3S 50 58 ProQuest 1809615223 Low Mei Peng 2017 Linking Entrepreneurial Orientation and Internal Corporate Social Responsibility to Employees Intention to Leave in Small Medium Sized Enterprises The case of Malaysia Thesis Austin J Leonard H Reficco E and Wei Skillern J in Social Entrepreneurship New Models of Sustainable Social Change A Nicholls ed Oxford University Press Oxford 2006b pp 169 181 Austin J Leonard H Reficco E and Wei Skillern J in The Accountable Corporation Corporate Social Responsibility Volume 3 M Epstein and K Hanson eds Praeger Westport CT 2006c pp 237 247 Hemingway 2013a p 49 50 Summers Donald B Dyck Bruno 2011 A Process Model of Social Intrapreneurship within a For Profit Company First Community Bank Social and Sustainable Entrepreneurship Advances in Entrepreneurship Firm Emergence and Growth Vol 13 pp 139 174 doi 10 1108 S1074 7540 2011 0000013010 ISBN 978 1 78052 072 8 Orlitzky Marc Schmidt Frank L Rynes Sara L 2003 Corporate Social and Financial Performance A Meta Analysis Organization Studies 24 3 403 441 doi 10 1177 0170840603024003910 S2CID 8460439 Barnett Michael L 2007 Stakeholder Influence Capacity and the Variability of Financial Returns to Corporate Social Responsibility The Academy of Management Review 32 3 794 816 doi 10 5465 amr 2007 25275520 JSTOR 20159336 S2CID 167584731 Rabinow P ed Michael Foucault Ethics Subjectivity and Truth Essential Works of Foucault 1954 1984 Volume 1 Penguin London 2000 Mason P PostCapitalism A Guide to Our Future Penguin London 2015 A guide to social intrapreneurs and where to find them TheGuardian com 31 January 2011 Venn Ronald Berg Nicola 2013 Building competitive advantage through social intrapreneurship South Asian Journal of Global Business Research 2 104 127 doi 10 1108 20454451311303310 Hemingway 2013a p 86 Austin Reficco James Ezequiel Corporate Social Entrepreneurship PDF a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Venn Ronald Berg Nicola 2013 Building competitive advantage through social intrapreneurship South Asian Journal of Global Business Research 2 1 104 127 doi 10 1108 20454451311303310 Bibliography editArcher M S Being Human The Problem of Agency Cambridge University Press Cambridge 2000 Austin James Stevenson Howard Wei Skillern Jane January 2006 Social and Commercial Entrepreneurship Same Different or Both Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice 30 1 1 22 doi 10 1111 j 1540 6520 2006 00107 x S2CID 154642522 Austin J Leonard H Reficco E and Wei Skillern J Social Entrepreneurship It is for Corporations too in Social Entrepreneurship New Models of Sustainable Social Change A Nicholls ed Oxford University Press Oxford 2006b pp 169 181 Austin J Leonard H Reficco E and Wei Skillern J Corporate Social Entrepreneurship A New Vision for CSR in The Accountable Corporation Corporate Social Responsibility Volume 3 M Epstein and K Hanson eds Praeger Westport CT 2006c pp 237 247 Bierhoff H W Prosocial Behaviour Psychology Press Hove 2002 Crane Andrew McWilliams Abagail Matten Dirk Moon Moon Jeremy Siegal Donald S eds 2010 Business Ethics A European Perspective Managing Corporate Citizenship and Sustainability in the Age of Globalization 3rd ed Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199211593 Drumwright M E Socially Responsible Organisational Buying Environmental Concern as a Noneconomic Buying Criterion Journal of Marketing 58 July 1 19 1994 Fisher C and Lovell A Business Ethics and Values 2nd ed Pearson Education Harlow U K 2006 Friedman M The Social Responsibility of Business is to Increase Its Profits The New York Times Magazine 13 September 1 13 1970 Hemingway C A An Exploratory Analysis of Corporate Social Responsibility Definitions Motives and Values Research Memorandum No 34 University of Hull Business School 2002 ISBN 978 1 902034 24 9 Hemingway C A Personal Values as the Catalyst for the Corporate Social Entrepreneur 17th Annual European Business Ethics Network EBEN Conference Ethics and Entrepreneurship University of Twente Enschede The Netherlands 24 26 June 2004 Hemingway C A 2005 Personal Values as a Catalyst for Corporate Social Entrepreneurship Journal of Business Ethics 60 3 233 249 doi 10 1007 s10551 005 0132 5 S2CID 145365066 Hemingway C A What Determines Corporate Social Entrepreneurship Antecedents and Consequences Conditions and Character Traits Presented at the PhD Workshop CSR and Sustainable Business School of Management and Entrepreneurship Katholieke Universitat Leuven Belgium 5 May 2006 Hemingway C A 2013a Corporate Social Entrepreneurship Integrity Within Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 44719 6 Hemingway Christine A 2013b Corporate Social Entrepreneurship In Idowu S O Capaldi N Zu L Das Gupta A eds Encyclopedia of Corporate Social Responsibility Springer Verlag pp 544 551 doi 10 1007 978 3 642 28036 8 363 ISBN 978 3 642 28036 8 Hemingway C A and Maclagan P W 2003 Managers Individual Discretion and Corporate Social Responsibility the Relevance of Personal Values 7th European Business Ethics Network EBEN UK U K Annual Conference and the 5th Ethics and Human Resource Management Conference Selwyn College Cambridge 7 8 April 2003 ISBN 1 84233 087 X Hemingway C A and Maclagan P W Managers Personal Values as Drivers of Corporate Social Responsibility Journal of Business Ethics 50 1 March I pp 33 44 2004 Jones T M Instrumental Stakeholder Theory a Synthesis of Ethics and Economics Academy of Management Review 20 2 404 437 1995 Kohlberg L in Handbook of Socialization Theory and Research D A Goslin ed Rand McNally Chicago 1969 pp 347 480 Lovell A Moral Agency as Victim of the Vulnerability of Autonomy Business Ethics A European 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