Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) in small and medium-sized enterprises: a developing country perspective
Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) in small and medium-sized enterprises: a developing country perspective
Purpose – The purpose of this research is to identify the CSR dynamics through a social capital lens in a developing country's context.
Approach – The research design underpinning this study is qualitative. Semi-structured interviews have been conducted with SMEs owner-managers.
Findings – Adopting a pragmatic stance, the research highlighted the significant role of the social capital concept in enabling or hindering SMEs’ engagement in the CSR discourse in the Egyptian context.
Implications/limitations – A holistic understanding of the subject has been achieved by examining core issues at different levels. It is recommended that micro-individual (SME owner/manager), meso-organisational (SME context and industry), and macro-environmental (socio-economic and cultural environment) dynamics be explored by employing suitable research methods grounded in research paradigms that allow for qualitative exploration.
Practical implications – By giving prominence to SMEs as the research focus, the significance of these enterprises for sustainable development is highlighted at the policy level by developing tools and mechanisms that deal with effective implementation of CSR programmes in that sector.
Social implications – An in-depth understanding of the CSR practices of SMEs as embedded in their operational management will help policy makers in promoting sustainable practices by integrating social and environmental activities in the day-to-day operations of SMEs.
Originality/value – The chapter makes a contribution to academic theory in the area of CSR in SMEs by examining the phenomenon through a social capital lens using a multi-layered approach from a developing country's perspective.
978-1-78190-254-7
167-192
Ibrahim, Shahnaz
f265ca69-1f0e-47af-b6d3-b9fd69f5613c
Jamali, Dima
cddcdb14-bb36-4423-a766-0b1e1d7985ba
Karatas-Ozkan, M.
f5b6c260-f6d4-429a-873a-53bea7ffa9a9
2012
Ibrahim, Shahnaz
f265ca69-1f0e-47af-b6d3-b9fd69f5613c
Jamali, Dima
cddcdb14-bb36-4423-a766-0b1e1d7985ba
Karatas-Ozkan, M.
f5b6c260-f6d4-429a-873a-53bea7ffa9a9
Ibrahim, Shahnaz, Jamali, Dima and Karatas-Ozkan, M.
(2012)
Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) in small and medium-sized enterprises: a developing country perspective.
In,
Underwood, Sarah, Blundel, Richard, Lyon, Fergus and Schaefer, Anja
(eds.)
Social and Sustainable Enterprise: Changing the Nature of Business.
(Contemporary Issues in Entrepreneurship Research, 2)
Emerald Publishing, .
(doi:10.1108/S2040-7246(2012)0000002012).
Record type:
Book Section
Abstract
Purpose – The purpose of this research is to identify the CSR dynamics through a social capital lens in a developing country's context.
Approach – The research design underpinning this study is qualitative. Semi-structured interviews have been conducted with SMEs owner-managers.
Findings – Adopting a pragmatic stance, the research highlighted the significant role of the social capital concept in enabling or hindering SMEs’ engagement in the CSR discourse in the Egyptian context.
Implications/limitations – A holistic understanding of the subject has been achieved by examining core issues at different levels. It is recommended that micro-individual (SME owner/manager), meso-organisational (SME context and industry), and macro-environmental (socio-economic and cultural environment) dynamics be explored by employing suitable research methods grounded in research paradigms that allow for qualitative exploration.
Practical implications – By giving prominence to SMEs as the research focus, the significance of these enterprises for sustainable development is highlighted at the policy level by developing tools and mechanisms that deal with effective implementation of CSR programmes in that sector.
Social implications – An in-depth understanding of the CSR practices of SMEs as embedded in their operational management will help policy makers in promoting sustainable practices by integrating social and environmental activities in the day-to-day operations of SMEs.
Originality/value – The chapter makes a contribution to academic theory in the area of CSR in SMEs by examining the phenomenon through a social capital lens using a multi-layered approach from a developing country's perspective.
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More information
Published date: 2012
Organisations:
Strategy, Innovation & Entrepreneurship
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 348215
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/348215
ISBN: 978-1-78190-254-7
PURE UUID: fc94ba65-a15e-47ae-b058-ea3ec96e7575
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 11 Feb 2013 16:47
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:21
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Contributors
Author:
Dima Jamali
Editor:
Sarah Underwood
Editor:
Richard Blundel
Editor:
Fergus Lyon
Editor:
Anja Schaefer
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