Publication type
Journal articlePublication Year
2007Journal
Journal of Business EthicsPublication Volume
73Publication Issue
4Publication Begin page
391Publication End page
408
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As corporate social responsibility involves a voluntary business endeavour to address social and environmental issues beyond legal compliance, governments cannot fall back on hierarchical command-and-control policies to support it. As such, it is complementary with the increasing popularity of public policies known as New Governance policies, where the government is engaged in a horizontal inter-organizational network of societal actors and where public policy is both formed and executed by the interacting and voluntary efforts from a multitude of stakeholders. However, such policies are known to generate substantive uncertainty about the content of CSR and its related issues, strategic uncertainty regarding the behavior of the actors involved and institutional uncertainty related to the interaction process involved in the institutional change. We explore New Governance policy instruments to address these uncertainties in the context CSR and discuss the experiences with these methods in the European Union.Keyword
EntrepreneurshipKnowledge Domain/Industry
Entrepreneurshipae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1007/s10551-006-9214-2