This article will be permanently flagged as inappropriate and made unaccessible to everyone. Are you certain this article is inappropriate? Excessive Violence Sexual Content Political / Social
Email Address:
Article Id: WHEBN0026302373 Reproduction Date:
A corporate social entrepreneur (CSE) is defined as "an employee of the firm who operates in a corporate social responsibility (CSR). This is because the CSE is driven by their dominant self-transcendent (concerned with the welfare of others) as opposed to their self-enhancement personal values.[1] Consequently, the CSE does not necessarily have a formal socially responsible job role, nor do they necessarily have to be in a senior management position to progress their socially responsible agenda." [2]
The notion of the CSE primarily relates to the field of entrepreneurship; human resource management and business strategy. Moreover, the concept is inherently linked with the notion of personal values: in itself, a field of study from sociology; anthropology and social psychology. Furthermore, due to the concept's associations with ideas about agency, this also means that this topic connects with moral philosophy. Such complexity reflects the inter-disciplinary nature of the field of corporate social responsibility.
The notion of the CSE first emerged in 2002 from a conceptual working paper which was published in the Hull University Business School Research Memoranda Series.[3] In that paper, it was argued that CSR can also be motivated by an altruistic impulse driven by managers’ personal values, in addition to the more obvious economic and macro political drivers for CSR. This reflected the traditional philosophical and business ethics debate regarding moral agency.[4][5] This paper was followed by a U.K. conference paper which highlighted the importance of managerial discretion in CSR [6] and was published the next year in the Journal of Business Ethics. In this latter paper, the concept of “entrepreneurial discretion” as an overlooked antecedent of CSR was mooted.[7]
Consequently, the term corporate social entrepreneur was first coined in a paper that was presented at the 17th Annual European Business Ethics Network Conference, in June 2004.[8] Here, the term Corporate Social Entrepreneur was first defined and differentiated from the different types of entrepreneurs: the ‘regular’ executive entrepreneur; the intrapreneur; the policy entrepreneur and the public or social entrepreneur.[9] (See also Austin et al., 2006a for a description of the similarities and differences between commercial and social entrepreneurship).[10] Initially, the concept was discussed in relation to managers. However, it was soon widened to include employees at any level of the firm, regardless of their formally appointed status. To be a CSE you do not necessarily have to be a manager. Seniority is not necessary, but, of course, it helps.[11][12]
Hemingway’s concept of the CSE emerged as a result of her own personal experience working as a marketing executive in the corporate world and it has also been the subject of some exploratory empirical investigation[13] [1]. It was also inspired by Wood, who had previously referred to “Ethical training, cultural background, preferences…and life experiences…that motivate human behavior”;[14] thereby supporting Trevino’s conceptual “Interactionist” model of ethical decision making in organizations.[15] Trevino's model included both individual and situational moderators, to combine with the individual’s stage of cognitive moral development,[16] to produce either ethical or unethical behaviour. And whilst studies existed regarding the activities of environmental champions at work [17] or other change leaders,[18] none of these studies specifically examined the role of employees' personal values in entrepreneurial discretion with regard to corporate social responsibility (CSR).
Thus, the connection between philosophical ideas of moral character as an influence for philanthropy).
Significantly, whilst the social entrepreneur and corporate social entrepreneur are united in their quest to create social value: a business ethics perspective encourages us to ask the question ‘For what end?’ Here business ethics is useful, as it uses intellectual frameworks to encourage us to think deeply about means and ends.[19][20][21] For example, the idea of the CSE creating social value which benefits both the corporation and society [22][23][24] is known as ‘enlightened self-interest’. Alternatively, a deontological viewpoint frames acts of socially responsible behaviour as driven by the individual's sense of duty to society, which may be viewed in terms of altruism.[25] Altruism is of course very difficult to support empirically, although there have been many studies of prosocial behaviour and support for the notion of self-transcendent (other-oriented) personal values in social psychology.[26][27]
All this leads us to the inherent complexity surrounding the subject of CSR, regarding its connection to global financial crisis caused by financial irregularities and lapses in corporate governance and personal integrity.
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.
Psychology, Evolutionary psychology, Love, Abnormal psychology, Experimental psychology
Ethics, Corporate crime, Cold war, Occupational safety and health, Globalization
Oclc, Critical theory, Émile Durkheim, Qualitative research, Philosophy of science
Cultural anthropology, Archaeology, Social anthropology, Sociology, History
Governance, Business, Corporate law, Financial risk, Corporate finance
Innovation, Venture capital, Dell, History of private equity and venture capital, Google
Accountability, Business ethics, Fair Trade, Supply chain management, Ethics
Internet, Indianapolis, Microfinance, Open source, Sustainable development
Transpersonal psychology, Islam, Indonesia, Management, Emotional intelligence