Corporate Responsibility and Political Philosophy

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A01=Kristian Hoyer Toft
Adam Smith
Author_Kristian Hoyer Toft
business ethics
Business Ethics Literature
business ethics theory
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Category=QDTS
Civil Society
climate change
collective responsibility
Corporate Citizenship
Corporate Citizenship Theory
corporate finance
Corporate Moral Agency
corporate social responsibility
corporations
critical theory analysis
CSR Policy
CSR Programme
CSR Theory
Deliberative Democracy
Epistemic Injustice
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eq_business-finance-law
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
Global Governance Initiatives
globalization
Habermas's Deliberative Democracy
Habermas’s Deliberative Democracy
human rights
inequality
Iris Marion Young
John Rawls
Jurgen Habermas
Kristian Hoyer Toft
liberalism
libertarianism
Market Failures Approach
Market Liberal's View
market liberalism
Market Liberal’s View
moral agent
ontology of organizations
organizational moral agency
Political CSR
political CSR models
political philosophy
principal-agent theory
property rights
Rawlsian Reflective Equilibrium
Separation Thesis
shareholders
Social Connection Model
social liberal corporate citizenship
Social Liberal Views
supply chain
supply chain responsibility
sustainability
sustainability governance
Thomas Piketty
UK Labour Government
Vice Versa
Virtue Ethics
Welfare Reform
Wider Issue
Young's Social Connection Model
Young’s Social Connection Model

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032400457
  • Weight: 249g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Aug 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book argues for the inclusion of the corporation as an integral element of political philosophy. It begins with a historical evaluation of the corporation as a constituent of political society. It shows how Adam Smith, Hegel, and Marx conceived the role of the corporation in relation to the state, the market and civil society, before moving on to the rejection of the corporation as a genuine moral and political agent by Rawls and Habermas. The next chapter of the book presents the corporation as a collective that possesses political and moral agency. The author outlines four distinct political philosophies of corporate responsibility: the Aristotelian conservative-virtue ethical conception; the market liberal theory; the social liberal theory of corporate citizenship and political CSR; and Marxist-inspired critical theories. It is argued that the social liberal theory provides a better justification compared to its rivals. The third and final group of chapters applies the social liberal conception – called the social liberal corporation – to important contemporary issues, including human rights in global supply chains, financial and digital firms, sustainability and climate change. Corporate Responsibility and Political Philosophy will appeal to political philosophers, political theorists, and applied ethicists, as well as scholars in other disciplines working on issues related to business ethics, organizational ethics, sustainability and corporate social responsibility. As it provides a comprehensive introduction to corporate responsibility it is also relevant to sustainability professionals who seek an overview of the theoretical debate on corporate responsibility.

Kristian Høyer Toft did his PhD in political philosophy at Aarhus University (2003) and was a visiting scholar in philosophy at Columbia University, the University of Pittsburgh and the University of Reading. He has published articles about climate justice, human rights and corporate responsibility in international journals, e.g. The Business and Human Rights Journal and Energy Research & Social Science. He held positions as a postdoctoral researcher in bioethics at the University of Copenhagen 2006-07), Assistant and Associate Professor at Aalborg University in applied philosophy (2011-2019), and is currently a guest researcher at the Sustainability Centre at the Copenhagen Business School (2020).

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