Corporate Social Responsibility Reporting: A Study of the Views of MNC Subsidiary Managers in an African Context

G. Amos, Jonathan Banahene
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Abstract

There is a general lack of research which directly seeks the views of MNC subsidiary managers about what internal and external pressures they perceive are imposed on them, and how such pressures, in turn, impact their CSR reporting in developing countries. To fill this gap and improve our understanding of CSR reporting practices of MNC subsidiaries, this study aims to investigate how MNC subsidiaries operationalise CSR reporting practices in an African context–Ghana. This study comprises analysis of CSR reports, websites and other publicly-available reports using qualitative data analysis and 15 in-depth, semi-structured interviews with respondents drawn from 8 MNC subsidiaries using legitimacy theory and institutional theory as lenses. The analysis identifies reporting relationships between MNC subsidiary and parent-company (as internal factors), and the supervisory relationships between MNC subsidiaries and local regulatory institutions (as external factors), as factors that induce/sensitise MNC subsidiaries managers to voluntarily disclose social responsibility information. The adoption of voluntary global standards for CSR such as GRI appeared to influence MNC subsidiaries’ CSR reporting practices. Additionally, locally espoused (or ingrained) values/expectations and norms that frown on actions and/or inactions that are deemed not to be socially acceptable corporate behaviours appeared to inform the CSR initiatives that MNC subsidiaries voluntarily disclose in order to acquire a sense of legitimacy. The results of this study have implications for research and practice. Generally speaking, MNC subsidiaries operating in an African context may require more local knowledge and support in relation to social and environmental responsibility. Limitations of this study include limited data available, particularly interviews, which provides opportunity for future research.
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企业社会责任报告:非洲跨国公司子公司经理的观点研究
目前普遍缺乏直接征求跨国公司子公司经理意见的研究,即他们认为施加给他们的内部和外部压力是什么,以及这些压力反过来如何影响他们在发展中国家的企业社会责任报告。为了填补这一空白,增进我们对跨国公司子公司企业社会责任报告实践的了解,本研究旨在调查跨国公司子公司如何在非洲--加纳--实施企业社会责任报告实践。本研究以合法性理论和制度理论为视角,分析了企业社会责任报告、网站和其他公开发布的报告,并对 8 家跨国公司子公司的受访者进行了 15 次深入的半结构式访谈。分析认为,跨国公司子公司与母公司之间的报告关系(作为内部因素),以及跨国公司子公司与当地监管机构之间的监督关系(作为外部因素),是诱导/促使跨国公司子公司管理者自愿披露社会责任信息的因素。企业社会责任自愿性全球标准(如全球报告倡议组织)的采用似乎影响了跨国公司子公司的企业社会责任报告实践。此外,当地信奉的(或根深蒂固的)价值观/期望和规范,对那些被认为不为社会所接受的企业行为的作为和/或不作为持否定态度,这似乎为跨国公司子公司自愿披露企业社会责任倡议提供了信息,以获得一种合法性。本研究的结果对研究和实践都有影响。一般来说,在非洲开展业务的跨国公司子公司可能需要更多与社会和环境责任相关的当地知识和支持。本研究的局限性包括可用数据有限,尤其是访谈数据,这为今后的研究提供了机会。
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