Corporate Responsibility for Wealth Creation and Human Rights

Corporate Responsibility for Wealth Creation and Human Rights

Enderle, Georges

Cambridge University Press

02/2023

331

Mole

Inglês

9781108823364

15 a 20 dias

Descrição não disponível.
Dedication; List of Figures, Tables and Boxes; Preface; Acknowledgments; About the Author; 1. Introduction and Overview; 2. The Context of Globalization, Sustainability and Financialization; Part I. Wealth Creation: The Purpose of Business and the Economy: 3. Semantics and the Wealth of Nations; 4. Wealth Includes Natural, Economic, Human and Social Capital; 5. Wealth Is a Combination of Private and Public Wealth; 6. Wealth Creation Is about Producing and Distributing Wealth; 7. Creating Wealth Involves Material and Spiritual Aspects; 8. Creating Sustainable Wealth in Terms of Human Capabilities; 9. Creating Means Making Something New and Better; 10. Wealth Creation Needs Self-Regarding and Other-Regarding Motivations; Part II. Human Rights as Public Goods in Wealth Creation: 11. All Internationally Recognized Human Rights are at Stake; 12. Human Rights Constitute Minimal Ethical Requirements; 13. Cost-Benefit Considerations about Human Rights as Goals, Means and Constraints; 14. Human Rights as Public Goods; Part III. Implications of Wealth Creation and Human Rights for Corporate Responsibility: 15. The Ethics of Business Organizations Is Called Corporate Responsibility; 16. The Moral Status of the Business Organization; 17. Mapping Corporate Responsibilities; 18. Corporate Governance for Wealth Creation and Human Rights; 19. A Case in Point: Corporate Responsibility for Less Income Inequality; 20. A Case in Point: How can Universities Promote Corporate Responsibility in their Supply Chains?: The Experience of the University of Notre Dame; Epilogue; Bibliography; Index of Names; Index of Subjects.
Corporate responsibility; CSR; business and society; purpose of the economy and business; wealth creation; seven features of wealth creation; natural; economic; human and social capital; private and public wealth; human rights; human rights and business; UN framework and guiding principles on business and human rights; human rights as minimal ethical requirements; human rights as public goods; balanced concept of corporate responsibility; corporate governance; corporate responsibility for less income inequality; corporate responsibility in the supply chains.