Institutional mirror versus substitute: How regulations affect explicit CSR motivation
Publikation: Beiträge in Zeitschriften › Konferenz-Abstracts in Fachzeitschriften › Forschung
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in: Academy of Management Proceedings, Jahrgang 2021, Nr. 1, 15588, 01.08.2021.
Publikation: Beiträge in Zeitschriften › Konferenz-Abstracts in Fachzeitschriften › Forschung
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Institutional mirror versus substitute: How regulations affect explicit CSR motivation
AU - Jasinenko, Anna
AU - Brieger, Steven
AU - Haack, Patrick
N1 - Conference code: 81
PY - 2021/8/1
Y1 - 2021/8/1
N2 - Prior literature proposes two opposing hypotheses of how national regulations could influence CSR motivation. The mirror hypothesis suggests that corporations will be more motivated to invest in CSR if there are strong and well enforced national CSR-related regulations because such institutional settings pressure CSR not only by direct regulations but also with normative pressures important for an organization’s reputation and legitimacy. On the contrary, the substitute hypothesis proposes that there will be more CSR motivation in countries of lax CSR-related regulations because corporations would feel the need to fill the institutional void or to avoid stricter regulations in the future. We apply a multi-method design focusing on the micro-foundations of CSR motivation to further examine and resolve this contradiction. Specifically, we examine how institutional regulations affect individual-level CSR motivation and elaborate on the role of trust in regulating institutions as a crucial psychological variable in this process. We find that explicit CSR motivation is generally high in laxly regulated contexts but can be equally high in stringently regulated contexts if the trust in regulatory institutions is high. With our findings, we underline and clarify the strong role of regulatory institutions on CSR and the crucial role of trust in regulatory institutions in this process. We discuss theoretical and practical contributions for CSR management, the field of business and society, as well as international business.
AB - Prior literature proposes two opposing hypotheses of how national regulations could influence CSR motivation. The mirror hypothesis suggests that corporations will be more motivated to invest in CSR if there are strong and well enforced national CSR-related regulations because such institutional settings pressure CSR not only by direct regulations but also with normative pressures important for an organization’s reputation and legitimacy. On the contrary, the substitute hypothesis proposes that there will be more CSR motivation in countries of lax CSR-related regulations because corporations would feel the need to fill the institutional void or to avoid stricter regulations in the future. We apply a multi-method design focusing on the micro-foundations of CSR motivation to further examine and resolve this contradiction. Specifically, we examine how institutional regulations affect individual-level CSR motivation and elaborate on the role of trust in regulating institutions as a crucial psychological variable in this process. We find that explicit CSR motivation is generally high in laxly regulated contexts but can be equally high in stringently regulated contexts if the trust in regulatory institutions is high. With our findings, we underline and clarify the strong role of regulatory institutions on CSR and the crucial role of trust in regulatory institutions in this process. We discuss theoretical and practical contributions for CSR management, the field of business and society, as well as international business.
KW - Management studies
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/7760991f-624a-38bc-acc1-6399fbe21d47/
U2 - 10.5465/ambpp.2021.15588abstract
DO - 10.5465/ambpp.2021.15588abstract
M3 - Conference abstract in journal
VL - 2021
JO - Academy of Management Proceedings
JF - Academy of Management Proceedings
SN - 0065-0668
IS - 1
M1 - 15588
T2 - 81st Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management – AOM 2021
Y2 - 30 July 2021 through 3 August 2021
ER -