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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Latest evolution of academic research in corporate social responsibility: an empirical analysis
José Javier Rivera AlcamiAlejandro Alvarado HerreraEnrique Bigné AlcañizRafael Curras-perezsubject
Corporate social performanceScope (project management)Empirical examinationContent analysisbusiness.industryCorporate social responsibilitySociologyPositive economicsPublic relationsbusinessGeneral Business Management and AccountingSocial responsibilitySocial Sciences (miscellaneous)description
PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to determine whether management‐ and marketing‐salient literature focused on corporate social responsibility (CSR) and related issues has evolved from 2003 to 2006, both quantitatively and qualitatively, and to learn which of three competitive epistemological evolutional views (progressive, variegational, normativist) best fits CSR evolution in both disciplines.Design/methodology/approachFollowing an ex professo methodology developed by de Bakker, Groenewegen and Den Hond, a content analysis (CA)‐based empirical examination of 570 papers focused on CSR and corporate social performance (CSP) published in indexed management and marketing journals between 2003 and 2006 was conducted. The selected temporal scope is equivalent, in terms of CSR published papers, to the period 1972‐2002 analyzed by de Bakker et al. Three coders judged each paper by their epistemological orientation and discipline pertinence, achieving larger enough reliability coefficients.FindingsThe epistemological evolution of CSR within the management and marketing literatures fits a progressive view, and both alternative evolutional perspectives, variegational and normativist, were rejected. This finding means that theoretical‐oriented papers (conceptual, exploratory or predictive) prevailed over prescriptive (instrumental and normative) and descriptive articles. This qualitative evolution has been accompanied by a significant growth in the total number of CSR papers published in the broad management field from 2003 to 2006.Research limitations/implicationsJudgments were mainly based on papers' abstracts, titles and keywords. Full text analyses were only done on those cases where coders had doubts.Originality/valueThe research contributes to a better understanding of the role of CSR within the management and marketing disciplines, as it is the first to analyse the epistemological evolution of CSR in the academic research. The findings serve to refute the ideas that CSR research has an intrinsic normative character, is still too embryonic or has a disoriented evolution.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2010-08-03 | Social Responsibility Journal |