Sustainability by Corporate Citizenship: The Moral Dimension of Sustainability

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Sustainability by Corporate Citizenship: The Moral Dimension of Sustainability. / Beckmann, Markus; Pies, Ingo.
in: The Journal of Corporate Citizenship, Jahrgang 2008, Nr. 31, 11.2008, S. 45-57.

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

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@article{24548733596a4bc9b98883e40a12b7f8,
title = "Sustainability by Corporate Citizenship: The Moral Dimension of Sustainability",
abstract = "Although the sustainability debate has already brought about considerable concep- tual progress, a pivotal dimension to sustainable development has so far been widely neglected. This article argues that, in addition to the ecological, economic and social dimension, sustainable development critically hinges on the moral dimension of institutional legitimacy. Institutional legitimacy is a moral dimension because it reflects the moral quality that people attribute to institutional arrangements needed to implement sustainability. Only if people can perceive these {\textquoteleft}rules of the game{\textquoteright} as fair, legitimate and mutually advantageous will they be willing to take them seriously, accept them and abide by them. As conventional mechanisms for creating and legitimising institutions are increasingly challenged, new governance mechanisms become increasingly important. Companies participate in these processes as corporate citizens: to the extent that they learn to carry ordo-responsibility for a fair and adequate institutional order, they contribute to empowering sustainability by corporate citizenship.",
keywords = "Sustainability sciences, Management & Economics, Corporate citizenship, Economic ethics, Global governance, Institutions, Legitimacy, Ordoresponsibility, Sustainability, Sustainability, Moral Dimension, Corporate Citizenship",
author = "Markus Beckmann and Ingo Pies",
year = "2008",
month = nov,
language = "English",
volume = "2008",
pages = "45--57",
journal = "The Journal of Corporate Citizenship",
issn = "1470-5001",
publisher = "Greenleaf Publishing",
number = "31",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Sustainability by Corporate Citizenship

T2 - The Moral Dimension of Sustainability

AU - Beckmann, Markus

AU - Pies, Ingo

PY - 2008/11

Y1 - 2008/11

N2 - Although the sustainability debate has already brought about considerable concep- tual progress, a pivotal dimension to sustainable development has so far been widely neglected. This article argues that, in addition to the ecological, economic and social dimension, sustainable development critically hinges on the moral dimension of institutional legitimacy. Institutional legitimacy is a moral dimension because it reflects the moral quality that people attribute to institutional arrangements needed to implement sustainability. Only if people can perceive these ‘rules of the game’ as fair, legitimate and mutually advantageous will they be willing to take them seriously, accept them and abide by them. As conventional mechanisms for creating and legitimising institutions are increasingly challenged, new governance mechanisms become increasingly important. Companies participate in these processes as corporate citizens: to the extent that they learn to carry ordo-responsibility for a fair and adequate institutional order, they contribute to empowering sustainability by corporate citizenship.

AB - Although the sustainability debate has already brought about considerable concep- tual progress, a pivotal dimension to sustainable development has so far been widely neglected. This article argues that, in addition to the ecological, economic and social dimension, sustainable development critically hinges on the moral dimension of institutional legitimacy. Institutional legitimacy is a moral dimension because it reflects the moral quality that people attribute to institutional arrangements needed to implement sustainability. Only if people can perceive these ‘rules of the game’ as fair, legitimate and mutually advantageous will they be willing to take them seriously, accept them and abide by them. As conventional mechanisms for creating and legitimising institutions are increasingly challenged, new governance mechanisms become increasingly important. Companies participate in these processes as corporate citizens: to the extent that they learn to carry ordo-responsibility for a fair and adequate institutional order, they contribute to empowering sustainability by corporate citizenship.

KW - Sustainability sciences, Management & Economics

KW - Corporate citizenship

KW - Economic ethics

KW - Global governance

KW - Institutions

KW - Legitimacy

KW - Ordoresponsibility

KW - Sustainability

KW - Sustainability

KW - Moral Dimension

KW - Corporate Citizenship

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 2008

SP - 45

EP - 57

JO - The Journal of Corporate Citizenship

JF - The Journal of Corporate Citizenship

SN - 1470-5001

IS - 31

ER -