Playing to the audience? Multi-level interactions between stakeholders and institutions around CSR in Bangladesh
Playing to the audience? Multi-level interactions between stakeholders and institutions around CSR in Bangladesh
Purpose: While corporate social responsibility (CSR) research and practice has expanded and evolved rapidly in recent years, little is known about how MNC subsidiaries develop their CSR strategies and how they reconcile global and local demands and pressures from both institutions and stakeholders. The paper aims to understand how institutions and stakeholder pressures interact at both national and international levels and how these interactions shape MNC subsidiaries' CSR in Bangladesh. Design/methodology/approach: Multiple case studies were used to investigate the CSR practices of 10 MNC subsidiaries operating in Bangladesh. To collect data, twenty-one semi-structured interviews were conducted. For supplementing primary data, secondary data from annual reports and websites were collected. Findings: The article demonstrates that the practice of CSR in Bangladesh is a result of pressures exerted by parent companies, international institutions and international stakeholders. The article reveals how lack of pressure from local stakeholders and institutions enables subsidiaries to gain traction and use their agency to apply globalised CSR conceptualisations not necessarily applicable to the localised context. Originality/value: The study has synthesised existing approaches to develop a multilevel framework for understanding how the intricate interactions between institutions and stakeholders from different levels (i.e. national and international levels) determine the trajectory of CSR adopted by subsidiaries in developing countries. This interaction undoubtedly plays a key role in determining the types of CSR strategy being enacted, the potential agency of different actors to shape change and the extent to which such pressures are likely to lead to CSR strategies that actually reflect and respond to the needs of local stakeholders.
Bangladesh, Corporate social responsibility (CSR), Institutional theory, multinational corporations (MNCs), stakeholder theory
464-493
Roy, Taposh
7e81485c-bc84-4e2b-8c2e-a5a6164cb6b2
Burchell, Jon
bb8082ff-1a8f-423c-83ba-f32ddf92a100
Cook, Joe
75d41d0f-0f94-432e-8b49-e215ebf9e78a
Roy, Taposh
7e81485c-bc84-4e2b-8c2e-a5a6164cb6b2
Burchell, Jon
bb8082ff-1a8f-423c-83ba-f32ddf92a100
Cook, Joe
75d41d0f-0f94-432e-8b49-e215ebf9e78a
Roy, Taposh, Burchell, Jon and Cook, Joe
(2022)
Playing to the audience? Multi-level interactions between stakeholders and institutions around CSR in Bangladesh.
Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal, 36 (2), .
(doi:10.1108/AAAJ-11-2019-4229).
Abstract
Purpose: While corporate social responsibility (CSR) research and practice has expanded and evolved rapidly in recent years, little is known about how MNC subsidiaries develop their CSR strategies and how they reconcile global and local demands and pressures from both institutions and stakeholders. The paper aims to understand how institutions and stakeholder pressures interact at both national and international levels and how these interactions shape MNC subsidiaries' CSR in Bangladesh. Design/methodology/approach: Multiple case studies were used to investigate the CSR practices of 10 MNC subsidiaries operating in Bangladesh. To collect data, twenty-one semi-structured interviews were conducted. For supplementing primary data, secondary data from annual reports and websites were collected. Findings: The article demonstrates that the practice of CSR in Bangladesh is a result of pressures exerted by parent companies, international institutions and international stakeholders. The article reveals how lack of pressure from local stakeholders and institutions enables subsidiaries to gain traction and use their agency to apply globalised CSR conceptualisations not necessarily applicable to the localised context. Originality/value: The study has synthesised existing approaches to develop a multilevel framework for understanding how the intricate interactions between institutions and stakeholders from different levels (i.e. national and international levels) determine the trajectory of CSR adopted by subsidiaries in developing countries. This interaction undoubtedly plays a key role in determining the types of CSR strategy being enacted, the potential agency of different actors to shape change and the extent to which such pressures are likely to lead to CSR strategies that actually reflect and respond to the needs of local stakeholders.
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Playing to the Audience
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Accepted/In Press date: 25 May 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 15 June 2022
Keywords:
Bangladesh, Corporate social responsibility (CSR), Institutional theory, multinational corporations (MNCs), stakeholder theory
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 457908
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/457908
ISSN: 0951-3574
PURE UUID: 558db18f-dd74-4e55-9cbe-c623e15f8f5f
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Date deposited: 22 Jan 2025 17:44
Last modified: 23 Jan 2025 02:48
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Author:
Jon Burchell
Author:
Joe Cook
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