Unilateral Standards for Social Responsibility: Corporations as Social Watchdogs?

Laura J. Spence and Michael Bourlakis

(2009)

Laura J. Spence and Michael Bourlakis (2009) Unilateral Standards for Social Responsibility: Corporations as Social Watchdogs?.

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Abstract

This paper focuses on the social dynamics of unilaterally determined social responsibility standards. These are put in the context of large customers in a supply chain determining company-specific standards, compliance with which is then a requirement for suppliers. We draw a brief comparison between multilaterally derived standards (such as those determined by the International Standards Organization) and unilaterally derived standards. Notably, there is an important difference stemming from the level of involvement and degree of control which the unilateral standard-setter has throughout the standard creation and implementation process. Indeed, we claim that the unilateral standard-setter which requires supplier compliance acts as regulator, monitor, and applier of sanctions to those supplier organizations. Ultimately, this puts the large corporation in the role of a Corporate Social Watchdog. In closing the paper we consider a future research agenda for this new concept.

Information about this Version

This is a Published version
This version's date is: 08/2009
This item is peer reviewed

Link to this Version

https://repository.royalholloway.ac.uk/items/1f099072-2d55-e3a8-eed0-a2cf6f31718c/1/

Item TypeMonograph (Working Paper)
TitleUnilateral Standards for Social Responsibility: Corporations as Social Watchdogs?
AuthorsSpence, Laura
Bourlakis, Michael
Uncontrolled KeywordsUnilateral Standards, Corporate Social Responsibility, Supply Chain, Corporate Social Watchdog
DepartmentsFaculty of History and Social Science\Management

Identifiers

isbn978-1-905846-36-8

Deposited by () on 19-May-2010 in Royal Holloway Research Online.Last modified on 14-Apr-2011

Notes

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