Environmental Protection And The Social Responsibility Of Firms

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2005-04-06
Publisher(s): Routledge
List Price: $155.00

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Summary

Everyone agrees that firms should obey the law. But beyond what the law requires-beyond bare compliance with regulations-do firms have additional social responsibilities to commit resources voluntarily to environmental protection? How should we think about firms sacrificing profits in the social interest? Are they permitted to do so, given their fiduciary responsibilities to their shareholders? Even if permissible, is the practice sustainable, or will the competitive marketplace render such efforts and their impacts transient at best? Furthermore, is the practice, however well intended, an efficient use of social and economic resources? And, as an empirical matter, to what extent do firms already behave this way? Until now, public discussion has generated more heat than light on both the normative and positive questions surrounding corporate social responsibility (CSR) in the environmental realm. In Environmental Protection and the Social Responsibility of Firms, some of the nation's leading scholars in law, economics, and business examine commonly accepted assumptions at the heart of current debates on corporate social responsibility and provide a foundation for future research and policymaking.

Table of Contents

About the Contributors vii
Overview
The Four Questions of Corporate Social Responsibility: May They, Can They, Should They, Do They?
1(12)
Bruce L. Hay
Robert N. Stavins
Richard H. K. Vietor
Part I: The Legal Perspective
Corporate Managers' Operational Discretion to Sacrifice Corporate Profits in the Public Interest
13(86)
Einer R. Elhauge
Comments on Elhauge
Does Greater Managerial Freedom to Sacrifice Profits Lead to Higher Social Welfare?
77(11)
John J. Donohue
On Sacrificing Profits in the Public Interest
88(11)
Mark J. Roe
Summary of Discussion
99(8)
Part II: The Economic Perspective
Corporate Social Responsibility: An Economic and Public Policy Perspective
107(38)
Paul R. Portney
Comments on Portney
Does Corporate Social Responsibility Have to Be Unprofitable?
132(5)
Dennis J. Aigner
On Portney's Complaint: Reconceptualizing Corporate Social Responsibility
137(8)
Daniel C. Esty
Summary of Discussion
145(6)
Part III: The Business Perspective
Environmental Protection and the Social Responsibility of Firms: Perspectives from the Business Literature
151(52)
Forest L. Reinhardt
Comments on Reinhardt
Ethics, Risk, and the Environment in Corporate Responsibility
184(13)
Eric W. Orts
Opportunities for and Limitations of Corporate Environmentalism
197(6)
David Vogel
Summary of Discussion
203(4)
Index 207

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