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RESEARCH PRODUCT
The Concept of Value for CSR: A Debate Drawn from Italian Classical Accounting
Patrizia TorrecchiaMassimo Costasubject
Value (ethics)business.industryStrategy and Management05 social sciencesAccounting06 humanities and the artsManagement Monitoring Policy and LawDevelopmentBusiness value0603 philosophy ethics and religionDilemmaMeaning (philosophy of language)0502 economics and businessCorporate social responsibilityNormative060301 applied ethicsSociologySet (psychology)business050203 business & managementdescription
This paper underlines the importance of the concept of value for corporate social responsibility (CSR) and then explores it beyond economics, looking for its social and philosophical roots. Considering the most recent literature on the matter, the dilemma between a non-monetary, multi-variable conception and a monetary, one-variable conception is set. To obtain the origins of the meaning for this basic concept in CSR, Italian literature regarding ‘value in accounting’ is explored. The main result from this first survey is the existence of a ‘chain’ from the highest conception of value (philosophical, ethical), to the most practical conception (accounting techniques of measurement). By this first approach, some provisional normative clauses are then deduced, in a ‘problem-setting attitude’ to be tested by means of further research on the topic, exploring other literature and building a new general paradigm to finally provide a commonly shared measure for social value. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2017-07-22 | Corporate Social Responsibility and Environmental Management |