2017
DOI: 10.1177/1052562917719918
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Balancing Profit and People: Corporate Social Responsibility in Business Education

Abstract: This qualitative study's purpose was to evaluate how undergraduate business students' perspectives, skills, and behaviors evolved through corporate social responsibility (CSR) education taught with a focus on critical thinking and sustainable problem solving. Business schools are struggling to incorporate CSR into their curriculum despite interest from students and pressure from accreditation agencies. This article primarily contributes practical tools for business schools teaching students to apply critical t… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Table 6 shows what the main disadvantages would be for companies pursuing SR objectives. Twenty-nine percent estimated that the time and effort devoted to carrying out this type of responsible action is very important [34,59], followed by the need for training in 22% of cases [16,24,34,59] and the investment required to implement these actions in 10% of cases [34]. However, on this last issue, 54% of respondents considered it to be relevant.…”
Section: Students Familiar With Srmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Table 6 shows what the main disadvantages would be for companies pursuing SR objectives. Twenty-nine percent estimated that the time and effort devoted to carrying out this type of responsible action is very important [34,59], followed by the need for training in 22% of cases [16,24,34,59] and the investment required to implement these actions in 10% of cases [34]. However, on this last issue, 54% of respondents considered it to be relevant.…”
Section: Students Familiar With Srmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Here we do see differences, as the economic profitability of SR was not considered as the least relevant advantage by those students who were familiar with SR. Table 9 shows the perceived disadvantages for companies pursuing SR objectives. Thirty-one percent considered that the need for training in the field of SR in the company itself was very relevant [16,24,34,59], followed by the time and effort required (24%) [34,59]. The least relevant disadvantage was the money that such actions would cost (10%) [34].…”
Section: Students Not Familiar With Srmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The balancing of profit and people continues to be of critical concern in business education (Deer & Zarestky, 2017). On the surface, this new worldview appears to have gained a firm foothold within business, with the recent Business Roundtable of top companies redefining the purpose of a corporation to include benefiting not only shareholders but all stakeholders, including customers, employees, suppliers, and communities (Business Roundtable, 2019).…”
Section: Hypothesis Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such expansive thinking requires asking students what kind of world they want to live in and courageously advancing that agenda. To help achieve this, Deer and Zarestky (2017) present critical thinking tools that allow students to develop a deeper understanding of the connection between business and social responsibility. For some students, it may mean “piercing the bubble,” they live in to make them more empathetic to those who are less fortunate (Rosenbloom & Cortes, 2008).…”
Section: Escaping Misinformation: Paving a Road Toward The Recovery Omentioning
confidence: 99%