Who cares wins
Series: Management Today ; January 2003, 40-46(5)Publication details: 2003Subject(s): Summary: Discusses the issue of Corporate Social Responsibility which is a new way of describing sustainability and diversity. Considers whether it is an innovative new idea which will lead to improved social attitudes and progress towards a better environment or if it just a gimmick designed to derail the protests of anti-globalisation protesters. Many companies such as Shell are now taking this idea very seriously with the thought that there is a further advantage in making these schemes work from the point of view of profit and the views of shareholders. Also to be considered are the changes brought about by the Pensions Act 2000, which now requires trustees of occupational pensions to state the extent to which they take social, environmental and ethical issues into account when making investment decisions.| Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Journal article | London Journal article | ABS66347 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 121191-1001 |
Discusses the issue of Corporate Social Responsibility which is a new way of describing sustainability and diversity. Considers whether it is an innovative new idea which will lead to improved social attitudes and progress towards a better environment or if it just a gimmick designed to derail the protests of anti-globalisation protesters. Many companies such as Shell are now taking this idea very seriously with the thought that there is a further advantage in making these schemes work from the point of view of profit and the views of shareholders. Also to be considered are the changes brought about by the Pensions Act 2000, which now requires trustees of occupational pensions to state the extent to which they take social, environmental and ethical issues into account when making investment decisions.