Business-NGO interactions in a multi-stakeholder context
Publication date
2010
Authors
Huijstee, M.M. van
Glasbergen, P.
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
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Abstract
The main purpose of this paper is to contribute to our
understanding of the conditions under which Business–
nongovernmental organization (NGO) interactions lead to
improvements in corporate social responsibility (CSR), by
assessing the role that the stakeholder context of the firm
plays in the processes. As a case study it takes an interaction
process between one NGO and one company with
both collaborative and confrontational traits, spanning
eight years and two issue fields, palm oil and soy, which
are characterized by varying stakeholder contexts. The
analysis demonstrates that the business–NGO interaction
induced a change from a direct to an indirect corporate
responsibility, and clarifies how inter-dependencies
between the company and other stakeholders than the
NGO influenced the interaction. The stakeholder inter-dependencies
vary per issue field: In some issue fields, the
stakeholder context allows for effective, collaborative
interaction between business and NGO, while in another
issue field, characterized by different stakeholder inter-dependencies,
collaborative, constructive interaction between the same business and the same NGO is not
feasible and, in addition, less effective in terms of CSR
than confrontational interaction.
Keywords
NGO's, corporate responsibility, companies, stakeholders, confrontational interaction