“…The classical cost-cutting school epitomised by Friedman (1970), in which CSR is conceptualised as an incremental cost to doing business, has now gone largely out of fashion. Shared (Maltz and Schein, 2012;Michelini and Fiorentino, 2012;Moon et al, 2011;Kramer, 2006, 2011) and blended value approaches (Emerson, 2003;Nicholls, 2009) now dominate the literature, with the business community largely taking CSR for granted and instead focusing their discussion on how to best implement it to create benefits for firms and their stakeholders. At other times, it is simply an acquiescence to outside pressure from NGOs, leaving businesses little room to select a particular strategy or to evaluate the impact on profit [Doh and Guay, 2006;Reinhardt et al, (2008), p.229].…”