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CORPORATE SOCIAL ACCOUNTABILITY

Shuangge Wen Orcid Logo, Jinchen Zhao

Stanford Journal of International Law, Volume: 58, Issue: 1. Winter, Pages: 63 - 111

Swansea University Author: Shuangge Wen Orcid Logo

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Abstract

The Covid-19 crisis has revived and is fast constructing a new landscape for the debate on corporate objectives. The pandemic has exposed significant vulnerabilities in company operations and their global supply chains, and the path to overcoming the crisis very much depends on a renewed environment...

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Published in: Stanford Journal of International Law
ISSN: 0731-5082 2164-8301
Published: Stanford, Calif. Stanford University School of Law 2022
Online Access: Check full text

URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa58708
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Abstract: The Covid-19 crisis has revived and is fast constructing a new landscape for the debate on corporate objectives. The pandemic has exposed significant vulnerabilities in company operations and their global supply chains, and the path to overcoming the crisis very much depends on a renewed environmental, economic, and social strategy, alongside a richer notion of corporate social responsibility (CSR) that is not only effectively enforced but also offers managerial guidance for more long-term value and resilience, so that corporations can discharge their shared responsibilities, together with governments and citizens, to change societal conditions and mitigate social risks. This article aims to contribute to this discussion by addressing the problems that arise from implementing CSR in the corporate law domain, and assessing how the term CSR may be refined and elevated through the lens of board accountability. The concept of Corporate Social Accountability (CSA) will be introduced as a much more refined formulation of CSR, and evaluated with the aim of sharpening the regulatory latitude of CSR, based on and beyond disclosure. In particular, CSR and board accountability will be linked and investigated as two mutually enhancing terms, so as to enable CSR to be more systematically and effectively applied in corporate law. By providing a much-needed new notion and identifying corresponding pragmatic routes for company law and CSR enforcement, we propose that the introduction of CSA will reduce current contestability by sorting, comparing, and advancing this complex field of inquiry. In conclusion, we should see the Covid-19 pandemic as an opportunity for us to reassess the corporate objective debate, and initiate a shift towards more genuine and authentic CSR supported by government intervention through corporate law, which is essential to fill in the gaps left by private institutions. Companies may demonstrate how resilient and prepared they are to manage risks and adapt to the “new normal”. With higher social expectations from the public and stakeholders in the wake of the pandemic, the introduction of CSA, as a comprehensive framework to study CSR in corporate law, seems pertinent, imperative, and indispensable.
Keywords: COVID-19
College: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
Issue: 1. Winter
Start Page: 63
End Page: 111