Corporate Social Responsibility Corporate social responsibility (CSR) is a broad topic in business issues and key areas. Rapidly changing companies are faced with rapid changes and consumers are constantly working on tradeability issues in food chains. Consumers and government agencies are increasingly interested in the practice of corporate social responsibility (CSR). CSR research has developed over the past 50 years (Carroll, 1999). CSR can be divided into four parts pyramid (Carroll, 1991). First, the meaning of economic responsibility, the organization must be profitable.
This report explains the advantages of corporate social responsibility, important issues of corporate social responsibility, and the realization of corporate social responsibility. The purpose of this white paper is to analyze Nokia using the corporate social responsibility model and determine what Nokia's CSR strategy is like. This report is divided into four parts. Section 1 Outline of Corporate Social Responsibility, Section 2 Implementation of Corporate Social Responsibility, Section 3 Nokia's Corporate Social Responsibility Model, Section 4
In this section we analyze and evaluate the definition of corporate social responsibility and explain the impact of corporate social responsibility on the definition of corporate social responsibility. First, I will explain and evaluate the definition of corporate social responsibility. Next, I will explain the definition of corporate social responsibility from the viewpoint of ethical behavior. The term corporate social responsibility has been in use since the early 1950's. Ackerman (1975) points out that companies are too concerned about financial consequences, which hinders social responses. Others said the company's sole purpose was to earn money (Friedman 1970), so they did not assume the obligation to "solve the world's problem" (Reinhardt 1999, pp. 53 ). Meanwhile, McDonald's and Prussie (1979) considers corporate social responsibility as a social obligation.
Corporate social responsibility resembles the concept of individual and corporate social responsibility. Some sources provide similar definitions for these two terms, but CSR is a specific business method that began in the 1950s and 1960s, and its definition has been extended over the next several decades. According to the Business Ethics Journal, there is no definition of widely accepted corporate social responsibility, but there are two characteristics to differentiate corporate social responsibility from other activities. There is no legal obligation. Other aspects of corporate social responsibility may differ