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J. Wolfensohn (2000)
Rethinking development : challenges and opportunities - remarks at the tenth ministerial meeting of UNCTAD by James D. Wolfensohn, President
E. Bonfiglioli, P. Monaghan, C. Rubbens, S. Zadek
Impacts of reporting: the role of social and sustainability reporting in organisational transformation (insights from recent business practices)
OECD
Codes of conduct – an expanded review of their contents
United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)
2001 human development report
World Bank
Rethinking development – challenges and opportunities
R. Jenkins (2001)
Codes of Conduct: Self Regulation in a Global Economy
R. Kanbur, M. Gupta, Christiaan Grootaert, Victoria Kwakwa, C. Calvo, N. Lustig (2001)
World development report 2000/2001 : attacking poverty
Commission of the European Communities
An EU contribution to better governance beyond our borders
Sustainable Investment Research International
Green, social and ethical funds in Europe
Environics International Ltd
A GlobeScan survey of business leaders on sustainable development
Environics International Ltd
2002 CSR Monitor
Cutter
Benchmark survey
KPMG
International Corporate Reporting Survey
C. Boasson, A. Wilson
Decoding business dynamics: mainstreaming corporate social responsibility in a company’s strategy, management, and systems
Commission of the European Communities
Communication from the Commission concerning corporate social responsibility: a business contribution to sustainable development
K. Watkins, P. Fowler (2002)
Rigged Rules and Double Standards: Trade, Globalisation, and the Fight Against Poverty
United Nations Research Institute for Social Development
Corporate codes of conduct – self‐regulation in a global economy
Worldbank
Global economic prospects and the developing countries 2001
S. Ariel Aaronson, J. Reeves
The European response to public demands for global corporate responsibility
G. Chiovato Rambaldo, A. Cramer
Measuring and reporting corporate performance on human rights
Focuses on “big business” and what is seen as its growing influence on the state of the world and argues that increasing globalization is posing significant challenges that require new thinking about global governance, particularly with regard to international trade. Businesses are required to operate within legislative and economic frameworks created by governments and should be helped to develop global, values‐based systems of management rooted in internationally accepted principles. Concludes that corporate social responsibility will only make a visible difference if the concept is fully integrated into corporate principles and practices, and if progress is monitored over time.
Corporate Governance – Emerald Publishing
Published: Sep 1, 2003
Keywords: Corporate responsibility; Globalization; International business
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