TY - CHAP
T1 - Corporate Social Responsibility, Reputation, and Moral Communication
T2 - A Constructivist View
AU - Schultz, Friederike
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - Conditions and notions of corporate reputation underwent in the last years a fundamental change. Economic and technological processes of globalization, modernization, and rationalization enforced the institutionalization of corporate social responsibility (CSR) in the corporate world. It is often assumed, that CSR positively affects corporate reputation and leads to financial benefits, although empirical evidence and an appropriate conceptualization of reputation are often missing. This chapter discusses the relation between CSR and reputation by taking a meta-perspective: it presents and critically discusses insights from instrumental perspectives and from political-normative perspectives (legitimacy, business ethics). It alternatively develops a constructivist communication view on CSR, building on the “communication constitutes organizations” perspective and a non-dualist turn. It argues that CSR is a symbolically mediated, communicative event, which, based on the underlying dynamics of moral communication, does not simply produce reputation, but also result in dysfunctional effects.
AB - Conditions and notions of corporate reputation underwent in the last years a fundamental change. Economic and technological processes of globalization, modernization, and rationalization enforced the institutionalization of corporate social responsibility (CSR) in the corporate world. It is often assumed, that CSR positively affects corporate reputation and leads to financial benefits, although empirical evidence and an appropriate conceptualization of reputation are often missing. This chapter discusses the relation between CSR and reputation by taking a meta-perspective: it presents and critically discusses insights from instrumental perspectives and from political-normative perspectives (legitimacy, business ethics). It alternatively develops a constructivist communication view on CSR, building on the “communication constitutes organizations” perspective and a non-dualist turn. It argues that CSR is a symbolically mediated, communicative event, which, based on the underlying dynamics of moral communication, does not simply produce reputation, but also result in dysfunctional effects.
KW - Corporate branding
KW - Corporate communication
KW - Corporate reputation
KW - Communicative view
KW - Constructivist view
KW - Corporate reputation
KW - Corporate social responsibility (CSR)
KW - Instrumental-functionalist view
KW - Legitimacy
KW - Moral communication
KW - Political-normative view
U2 - 10.1002/9781118335529.ch30
DO - 10.1002/9781118335529.ch30
M3 - Book chapter
SN - 9780470670989
SP - 362
EP - 375
BT - The Handbook of Communication and Corporate Reputation
A2 - E. Carroll, Craig
PB - Wiley
CY - Chichester
ER -