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Corporate Social Responsibility Cuban style

Corporate Social Responsibility Cuban style
Corporate Social Responsibility Cuban style
This chapter draws upon data collected over several research trips to Cuba undertaken between 2013 and 2017 that evidences how the concept of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) is understood there. Firstly, some background on Cuba is provided, describing the island nation’s economic journey from the status of a free enterprise oriented US ‘neo-colony’ in the first half of the 20th century, through several decades of strong Soviet inspired state control after the 1959 revolution, before it gradually adopted what has been termed a ‘market socialist’ model after Fidel Castro left the Presidency in 2007. The chapter then presents a snapshot of the fledgling state of CSR in Cuba as understood and practised in newly licensed private small and medium-sized enterprises and state-business partnerships. The kinds of practices that are seen as belonging under the CSR umbrella are compared. The chapter acknowledges the unique political and economic conditions in Cuba and the problems that arise in applying concepts, measures and definitions which have been formulated in the context of Western economies. The chapter therefore provides an insight into how CSR is constructed in a country that has adopted cultural norms of solidarity and collectivist ethics. This is contrasted with the way the concept is understood and operationalized in liberal capitalist countries with paradigmatically ‘neoliberal’ and individualist values, where the norm of self-interest prevails in economic discourse. Finally, we argue that this case study of CSR in a highly regulated economy offers a valuable input to the on-going debate over the merits and demerits of strong state regulation in terms of achieving socially and environmentally responsible business practices.
CSR, Cuba, Corporate Social Responsibility, Sustainability, Ethics, Governance
2196-7075
1
Springer Cham
Baden, Denise
daad83b9-c537-4d3c-bab6-548b841f23b5
Wilkinson, Stephen
159bfbae-a90d-48e9-b85d-5a082bc8891e
Idowu, Samuel
Baden, Denise
daad83b9-c537-4d3c-bab6-548b841f23b5
Wilkinson, Stephen
159bfbae-a90d-48e9-b85d-5a082bc8891e
Idowu, Samuel

Baden, Denise and Wilkinson, Stephen (2021) Corporate Social Responsibility Cuban style. In, Idowu, Samuel (ed.) Current Global Practices of Corporate Social Responsibility: In the Era of Sustainable Development Goals. (CSR, Sustainability, Ethics & Governance, 1) Springer Cham.

Record type: Book Section

Abstract

This chapter draws upon data collected over several research trips to Cuba undertaken between 2013 and 2017 that evidences how the concept of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) is understood there. Firstly, some background on Cuba is provided, describing the island nation’s economic journey from the status of a free enterprise oriented US ‘neo-colony’ in the first half of the 20th century, through several decades of strong Soviet inspired state control after the 1959 revolution, before it gradually adopted what has been termed a ‘market socialist’ model after Fidel Castro left the Presidency in 2007. The chapter then presents a snapshot of the fledgling state of CSR in Cuba as understood and practised in newly licensed private small and medium-sized enterprises and state-business partnerships. The kinds of practices that are seen as belonging under the CSR umbrella are compared. The chapter acknowledges the unique political and economic conditions in Cuba and the problems that arise in applying concepts, measures and definitions which have been formulated in the context of Western economies. The chapter therefore provides an insight into how CSR is constructed in a country that has adopted cultural norms of solidarity and collectivist ethics. This is contrasted with the way the concept is understood and operationalized in liberal capitalist countries with paradigmatically ‘neoliberal’ and individualist values, where the norm of self-interest prevails in economic discourse. Finally, we argue that this case study of CSR in a highly regulated economy offers a valuable input to the on-going debate over the merits and demerits of strong state regulation in terms of achieving socially and environmentally responsible business practices.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: December 2020
Published date: April 2021
Keywords: CSR, Cuba, Corporate Social Responsibility, Sustainability, Ethics, Governance

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 445913
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/445913
ISSN: 2196-7075
PURE UUID: c9f3b5db-d7ea-48bd-9e33-8c8db1042f15
ORCID for Denise Baden: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2736-4483

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 13 Jan 2021 17:31
Last modified: 23 Feb 2024 02:36

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Contributors

Author: Denise Baden ORCID iD
Author: Stephen Wilkinson
Editor: Samuel Idowu

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