Jeremy Moon

Jeremy Moon
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Jeremy verified their affiliation via an institutional email.
Copenhagen Business School · Department of Management, Society and Communication

Doctor of Philosophy

About

195
Publications
184,836
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Introduction

Publications

Publications (195)
Article
This introduction, and the special issue on 'Contesting social responsibilities of business: Experiences in context' it frames, addresses the neglected question of the experience of contestation in the terrain of the social responsibilities of business. It re-conceptualises the social responsibilities of business by advancing research grounded in a...
Article
Full-text available
This introduction, and the special issue on 'Contesting social responsibilities of business: Experiences in context' it frames, addresses the neglected question of the experience of contestation in the terrain of the social responsibilities of business. It re-conceptualises the social responsibilities of business by advancing research grounded in a...
Chapter
This article reviews a conversation between business ethicists and feminist scholars begun in the early 1990s and traces the development of that conversation in relation to feminist theory. A bibliographic analysis of the business ethics (BE) and corporate social responsibility (CSR) literatures over a twenty-five-year period elucidates the degree...
Chapter
This introductory textbook explores key issues and recent discussions within the field of corporate sustainability and social responsibility, through theoretical and practical perspectives. Written by an international team of experts, the chapters introduce the actors and corporate processes that shape firms' management of environmental, social and...
Chapter
This introductory textbook explores key issues and recent discussions within the field of corporate sustainability and social responsibility, through theoretical and practical perspectives. Written by an international team of experts, the chapters introduce the actors and corporate processes that shape firms' management of environmental, social and...
Chapter
This introductory textbook explores key issues and recent discussions within the field of corporate sustainability and social responsibility, through theoretical and practical perspectives. Written by an international team of experts, the chapters introduce the actors and corporate processes that shape firms' management of environmental, social and...
Chapter
Full-text available
This introductory textbook explores key issues and recent discussions within the field of corporate sustainability and social responsibility, through theoretical and practical perspectives. Written by an international team of experts, the chapters introduce the actors and corporate processes that shape firms' management of environmental, social and...
Chapter
Full-text available
This chapter is the opening chapter of the textbook "Corporate Sustainability" (2023 by Cambridge University Press). The chapter defines corporate sustainability and shows how it relates to and differs from other concepts such as corporate social responsibility and business ethics. The chapter also reviews main motivations that firms have to engage...
Research
This report is a product of the academic research project. The Regulation of International Supply Chains (RISC). RISC seeks to shed light on how social sustainability issues – like working conditions and occupational health and safety – are governed in the Bangladesh ready-made garment (RMG) industry. By looking at the many initiatives set in place...
Article
We investigate the relationship of corporate social responsibility (CSR) (often assumed to reflect corporate voluntarism) and government (often assumed to reflect coercion). We distinguish two broad perspectives on the CSR and government relationship: the dichotomous (i.e., government and CSR are / should be independent of one another) and the rela...
Article
Private organizations play a growing role in governing global issues alongside traditional public actors such as states, international organizations, and subnational governments. What do we know about how private authority and public policy interact? What are the implications of answering this question for understanding support for, and effects of,...
Article
Full-text available
This study analyzes which firms leave multi-stakeholder initiatives for corporate social responsibility. Based on an analysis of all active and delisted business participants from the United Nations Global Compact between 2000 and 2015 (n=15,853), we find that small and medium-sized enterprises are more likely to leave than larger and publicly-trad...
Technical Report
Full-text available
The Regulation of International Supply Chains (RISC) team has created a brief on the early impacts of coronavirus in the Bangladesh apparel supply chain. It aggregates dozens of sources and looks behind the numbers to understand the broader issues and challenges at play.
Thesis
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Seven years ago this month, more than 1,100 garment workers in Bangladesh were killed when the Rana Plaza complex collapsed on top of them. Today, the Bangladesh apparel industry and its 4+ million workers face a new crisis: coronavirus. Obvious health issues aside, the impacts of the global pandemic on the industry and its workers are potentially...
Research
Full-text available
Seven years ago this month, more than 1,100 garment workers in Bangladesh were killed when the Rana Plaza complex collapsed on top of them. Today, the Bangladesh apparel industry and its 4+ million workers face a new crisis: coronavirus. Obvious health issues aside, the impacts of the global pandemic on the industry and its workers are potentially...
Article
Full-text available
For nearly as long as the topic of sustainable business has been taught and researched in business schools, proponents have warned about barriers to genuine integration in business school practices. This article examines how academic sustainability centres try to overcome barriers to integration by achieving technical, cultural and political fit wi...
Article
Full-text available
In this introductory paper for the special issue “Government and the Governance of Business Conduct: Implications for Management and Organization”, we focus on government as an institution in the broader context of the governance of business conduct. We review the longevity and heterogeneity of governmental actors along with, and in relation to, th...
Article
Full-text available
Recent research has increasingly emphasized the micro-foundations of knowledge transformation in multi-national enterprises (MNEs). Although the literature has provided ample evidence of the enablers of and barriers to the translation of practices, less is known about the activities and efforts of translators that lead to specific types of translat...
Article
Full-text available
Although corporate social responsibility (CSR) practice increasingly addresses gender issues, and gender and CSR scholarship is expanding, feminist theory is rarely explicitly referenced or discussed in the CSR literature. We contend that this omission is a key limitation of the field. We argue that CSR theorization and research on gender can be im...
Article
Full-text available
Gender is one of the most taken-for-granted institutions. Inequality is a common by-product of this institution and questions arise as to how such inequalities can be addressed. We uncover the cognitive and emotional processes individuals experience that enable them to begin disrupting the gender institution, within our case context of a gender equ...
Article
“Responsible lobbying” is an increasingly salient topic within business and management. We make a contribution to the literature on “responsible lobbying” in three ways. First, we provide novel definitions and, thereby, make a clear distinction between lobbying and corporate political activity. We then define responsible lobbying with respect to it...
Article
Full-text available
This article reviews a conversation between business ethicists and feminist scholars begun in the early 1990s and traces the development of that conversation in relation to feminist theory. A bibliographic analysis of the business ethics (BE) and corporate social responsibility (CSR) literatures over a twenty-five-year period elucidates the degree...
Article
Full-text available
This article introduces the concept of corporate social responsibility (CSR) in the seemingly oxymoronic context of Chinese “authoritarian capitalism.” Following an introduction to the emergence of authoritarian capitalism, the article considers the emergence of CSR in China using Matten and Moon’s framework of explaining CSR development in terms b...
Chapter
Full-text available
This chapter investigates the antecedents to the development of the three components of subsidiaries’ absorptive capacity (ACAP): recognition, assimilation and application of transferred knowledge in the context of the vertical flow of social and environmental accounting and reporting (SEAR) knowledge from the HQ to acquired subsidiaries. Our analy...
Article
This article investigates Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) in Asia through two related themes: research knowledge and ethical norms. 'CSR in Asia' research is shown to be growing, particularly in East Asia. Compared with Western CSR literature, it is shown to be dominated by empirical, particularly quantitative, research. More substantively, t...
Article
Full-text available
Special Issue on: Gender, Business Ethics, and Corporate Social Responsibility - Volume 24 Issue 1 - Kate Grosser, Jeremy Moon, R. Edward Freeman, Julie Nelson
Article
Full-text available
This paper analyses policies of 22 European Union member governments, designed to encourage corporate social responsibility (CSR) between 2000 and 2011. It categorises these policies by their regulatory strength and identifies the range of issues to which CSR policies are directed. The paper argues that Northern European, Scandinavian and UK govern...
Article
Based on an embedded multiple case study of a UK-based MNC, FINEST, informed by 24 semi-structured interviews, this paper investigates the antecedents and outcome of subsidiaries’ absorptive capacity (ACAP) in the context of the intra-MNC transfer of social and environmental accounting and reporting (SEAR) knowledge from the HQ to acquired subsidia...
Article
Full-text available
The fields of Corporate Governance and Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) have attracted increasing scholarly interest and yet the nature of their relationship remains contested. These two areas of knowledge and practice are closely inter-related, particularly as firms seek to gain long-term sustainability. Corporate governance and CSR interface...
Book
Corporate social responsibility (CSR) has been defined as ‘the responsibility of enterprises for their impacts on society’. Is CSR a contradiction in terms? Corporate Social Responsibility: A Very Short Introduction shows that CSR holds much more value than it first appears, and shows how it has come of age in recent years. Illustrating the sorts o...
Article
We analyse the importance of emerging digital technologies for understandings of corporations and citizenship. We ask whether or not these (new) media technologies increase the importance of dissensual, paradoxcial and polyphonic approaches to corporate social responsibility; contribute to the need for altered and/or new metaphors of corporate-soci...
Article
This paper addresses the issue of the influence of global governance institutions, particularly international sustainability standards, on a firm’s intra-organizational practices. More precisely, we provide an exploratory empirical view of the impact of the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) on a multinational corporation’s corporate social responsi...
Article
Full-text available
http://www.emeraldinsight.com/journals.htm?articleid=17106310&ini=aob This paper develops the contributions that higher education institutions (HEIs) can make to sustainable development and explores issues and drivers for creating accounts for “university social responsibility”. It aims to contribute to discussions about whether, under which circum...
Article
Full-text available
Little attention has been paid to the importance of social media in the corporate social responsibility (CSR) literature. This deficit is redressed in the present paper through utilizing the notion of ‘citizenship arenas’ to identify three dynamics in social media-augmented corporate–society relations. First, we note that social media-augmented ‘co...
Article
In this paper, we address the question of the influence of a global governance institution, the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI), on a multinational corporation’s (MNC) management practices. More precisely, this article provides an empirical view into the impact of sustainability reporting on organizational practices; and explores the effects of o...
Article
The financial crisis has brought about dramatic consequences for economies and societies. Questions emerge about responsibility for the crisis and, implicitly or explicitly irresponsibility; the obligations to take responsibility for the costs and other adverse effects of the recession; and the nature of responsibility for social welfare and busine...
Article
Full-text available
This paper investigates different modes of organizing for corporate social responsibility (CSR). Based on insights from organization theory, we theorize two ways to organize for CSR. “Complete” organization for CSR happens within businesses and depends on the availability of certain organizational elements (e.g., membership, hierarchy, rules, monit...
Article
This paper contributes to the literature on political CSR by investigating the processes by which regulations reflecting political CSR are formulated and disseminated. We conceptualise international interactions of business, civil society and government as ‘regulatory configurations’ of ‘initiation’ and ‘multiplier effects’ in order to identify and...
Article
This paper analyses policies of twenty two EU member governments designed to encourage corporate social responsibility (CSR) over the first decade of the century. Our paper categorizes policies for CSR into different types depending on their expected degree of regulatory strength. Secondly, whilst it identifies a wide range of issues to which gover...
Article
This article takes its starting point in two recent and related empirical developments: First, through Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) companies address global challenges and opportunities. Second, national governments increasingly regulate CSR. This poses a puzzle: if private actors face a range of new social demands as they operate in host...
Article
The expectation that management education institutions should be leading thought and action on issues related to corporate responsibility and sustainability has been reinforced in the light of their association with business leaders’ failings, including corporate corruption, the financial crisis and various ecological system crises. The United Nati...
Chapter
The questions of whether corporations can or should be regarded as citizens, and in which communities such citizenship should be acknowledged or contested, have received growing attention (Gerencser, 2005; Moon, Crane and Matten, 2005; Norman and Néron, 2008). A parallel debate on the role of corporations in governing the citizenship of individuals...
Book
Full-text available
Minority Government: The Liberal Green Experience in Tasmania includes a collection of essays and studies of the Rundle minority government in Tasmania between 1996 and 1998. The concern of these essays is not only with the broad political and public policy implications of this government, but with the effect of the emergence of the Tasmanian Green...
Article
Full-text available
The financial crisis has brought about dramatic consequences for our economy and society and we are still witnessing a fragile recovery. The financial sector has been broadly held at least partly responsible for the financial crisis, albeit in the context of regulatory failure and borrower short-sightedness. The question of sources of responsibilit...
Article
There is a growing management literature on Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR), broadly the responsibility of business to society. Moreover, much of the literature tends to stress either 1) a particular actor perspective (e.g. firms, business associations, governments, civil society), or 2) a particular sphere (e.g. national, sectoral and global...
Article
Although organizations have embraced the sustainability rhetoric in their discourse and external reporting, little is known about the processes whereby management control systems contribute to a deeper integration of sustainability within organizational strategy. This paper addresses this gap and mobilizes a configuration approach to theorise the r...
Article
Full-text available
The role of multinational corporations (MNCs) in fostering or undermining development within poor communities in developing countries has been a subject of intensive debate within academic and practitioner circles. MNCs are not only considered an obstacle to development but also as sources of solutions to some of the pressing social and environment...
Article
Full-text available
This study develops a conceptual framework to understand the roles and uses of control systems in the integration of sustainability within organisational strategy. It highlights the importance of integrating sustainability within management control rather than simply relying on discourse to deliver a triple rather than a single bottom line. The stu...
Article
This paper conceptualizes standardization as institutional work to study the emergence of a standard and the deployment of its regulatory power. We rely on unique access to longitudinal archival data for exploring how the FTSE4Good index, a responsible investment index, emerged as a standard for socially responsible corporate behavior. Our results...
Article
Full-text available
This article investigates corporate social responsibility (CSR) as an institution within UK multinational corporations (MNCs). In the context of the literature on the institutionalization of CSR and on critical CSR, it presents two main findings. First, it contributes to the CSR mainstream literature by confirming that CSR has not only become insti...
Chapter
Full-text available
This chapter explores business schools’ efforts and achievements around the integration of sustainability. The authors have analysed the Sharing Information on Progress (SIP) reports of the first 100 United Nations Principles for Responsible Management Education (UNPRME) signatories who developed and uploaded their report onto the UNPRME website1....
Article
The aim of this paper is to both consider what is meant by ‘responsible business’ and to explore pedagogical approaches which have been shown to lead to effective student engagement with this important area of modern business thinking
Article
The question of why and how firms' approach to Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) differs across countries is one that can only be adequately addressed by giving a strong theoretical underpinning to research on comparative CSR. To this end, drawing on institutional theory and the institutionalist arguments of the comparative capitalism literatur...
Chapter
Full-text available
Corporate citizenship is typically considered as synonymous with CSR. In contrast, this chapter uses the term 'corporate citizenship' to examine the changing roles of corporations as active participants in emerging forms of (global) governance. The ways in which wider society is being governed is broadly theorized and the different ways in which 'c...
Article
Full-text available
Using a sample of 72 European and 22 North American educational institutions, we examine the extent to which business schools in North America and Europe are driving educational programs and initiatives in corporate social responsibility and sustainability (CSRS). Drawing on several theoretical perspectives, such as institutional-comparative perspe...
Article
Using a sample of 72 European and 22 North American educational institutions, we examine the extent to which business schools in North America and Europe are driving educational programs and initiatives in corporate social responsibility and sustainability (CSRS). Drawing on several theoretical perspectives, such as institutional-comparative perspe...
Article
Full-text available
This paper explores the endeavours and achievements of business schools in the integration of sustainability by analysing the Sharing Information on Progress (SIP) reports of the first 100 UN PRME signatories who developed and uploaded their report onto the UN PRME website. The findings from the analysis are presented in an order which reflects the...
Article
This paper theorizes the influence of Socially Responsible Investment (SRI) indices on responsible corporate behaviour. We develop a framework that integrates environmental, relational and cognitive mechanisms working across institutional and organisational levels of analysis. We use this framework to explain how companies adjust their behaviour in...
Article
This article investigates the development of research in the field of CSR in China. The justification for this is that (i) there is evidence that CSR is emerging as a management practice and management field internationally; (ii) there is a general interest in the distinctiveness or comparability of management and management research in Asia and Ch...
Article
Citizenship based on identity and difference brings to the fore new actors, issues and arenas of political contestation and struggle. In this paper, we explore the multifaceted role of the corporation in mediating the nature, meaning and significance of particular citizenship identities. We show that corporations can reflect citizenship identities,...
Article
This article is about corporate social responsibility (CSR) and aims to distinguish different types of CSR-government relationship and to understand these in the context of broader state roles and government-business relations. It investigates these relationships comparatively, historically, and in terms of new institutionalism. It does so comparat...
Article
This article examines the role of governments and civil society in shaping and encouraging corporate social responsibility (CSR). It begins by exploring the relationship between CSR and particular patterns of business-government-civil society relations. It then examines the patterns of business- government relations that are associated with CSR. It...
Book
The Oxford Handbook of Corporate Social Responsibility is a review of the academic research that has both prompted, and responded to, the issues of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR). Business schools, the media, the corporate sector, governments, and non-governmental organizations have all begun to pay more attention to these issues in recent y...
Article
Full-text available
This article contextualises current debates over human rights and transnational corporations. More specifically, we begin by first providing the background to John Ruggie’s appointment as ‘Special Representative of the Secretary-General on the issue of human rights and transnational corporations and other business enterprises’. Second, we provide a...
Article
This special issue section of three papers emerges from the second of four CORE conferences on The Potential of CSR to Support the Implementation of the EU Sustainability Strategy supported by Marie Curie funding. The purpose of this Introduction is to explain the broad issues at the heart of the series and to explain the significance of the three...
Article
Full-text available
As employee volunteering (EV) is increasingly regarded as a means of improving companies' community and employee relations, we investigate the contribution of EV to corporate social responsibility, specifically whether and how it contributes to social capital. We investigate the dynamics of EV in three UK companies. We explore the social relations...
Article
Full-text available
An ever increasing number of British companies are realising the benefits of reporting to stakeholders on their corporate responsibility activities. With the exception of the UK Companies Act, which requires certain companies to report but does not specify anything more than this, corporate responsibility reporting is currently voluntary. The topic...
Article
Corporate social responsibility (CSR) has experienced a journey that is almost unique in the pantheon of ideas in the management literature. Its phenomenal rise to prominence in the 1990s and 2000s suggests that it is a relatively new area of academic research. This book seeks to offer such a critical reflection on some of the major debates that co...

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