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Academic Year: | 2013/4 |
Owning Department/School: | School of Management |
Credits: | 6 |
Level: | Intermediate (FHEQ level 5) |
Period: |
Semester 2 |
Assessment: | CW 40%, EX 60% |
Supplementary Assessment: |
Like-for-like reassessment (where allowed by programme regulations) |
Requisites: | |
Description: | Aims: This course examines corporate responsibility (CR) and focuses on exploring the responsibilities of private, public and voluntary organisations in a range of contemporary environmental and social issues and in the context of differing ethical frameworks. The unit analyses CR from a range of different theoretical and empirical perspectives. The unit will enable students to engage with and appreciate different perspectives and approaches for dealing with the complex ethical, social and environmental issues that arise within today’s global business environment. The course aims to equip them with tools and approaches necessary for the development of rounded perspectives on them. Learning Outcomes: Upon completing the course, students will be able to: * Demonstrate a thorough and comprehensive knowledge of the different ethical principles which constitute CR, and how these perspectives inform various codes of conduct and self-regulatory standards for CR that are advocated by stakeholder groups and companies; * Understand the current and future challenges being faced by businesses as they negotiate their relationship with their physical and social environments in fast changing conditions, and the key questions these pose for corporate action, strategies and purposes; * Identify the tensions between conflicting business and social responsibilities and critique different managerial approaches to working with stakeholders to address issues of corporate social responsibility; * Apply the theoretical and practical aspects of corporate responsibility to a range of contemporary social and environmental problems; * Critically and creatively assess different approaches to the management of CR issues and evaluate the prospects and limits of different policy approaches related to these issues. Skills: Studying the unit will help students to develop the skills to: * Coherently discuss, defend, and communicate perspectives relating to CR in writing (T, F, A) * Identify and evaluate salient CR challenges facing business organisations from multiple perspectives (T, F, A) * Evaluate and critically assess strategies for responding to social and environmental issues (T, F, A) * Interpret data and evidence concerned with companies and their social responsibilities (T, A) * Apply theories from strategy, economics, law and political science to real world cases relating to social responsibility (T, A). Content: Corporate Responsibility is a concept whereby companies integrate social and environmental concerns in their business operations and in their interactions with their stakeholders on a voluntary basis. The unit introduces the fundamental tools and perspectives of corporate responsibility and explores their application to various contexts and in respect of a range of issues. A variety of conceptual perspectives on CR will be introduced and explored on the unit, including perspectives from business ethics, law, political science, economics, strategy and management. The unit emphasises stakeholder thinking and investigates its application to understanding of CR and the development of corporate responses to social and environmental issues. Topics addressed include, but will not be restricted to: principles of business ethics, stakeholder theory, the historical origins of the CR movement, different models and conceptions of CR, the business case for CR, CR in the settings of markets, work and community, and the role of codes and self-regulatory standards for promoting CR as an effective tool of governance. |
Programme availability: |
MN20445 is Optional (DEU) on the following programmes:Department of Chemistry
MN20445 is Optional on the following programmes:School of Management
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