4.6 Article

Corporate Social Responsibility, Sustainability, Sustainable Development and Corporate Sustainability: What Is the Difference, and Does It Matter?

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 13, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su13115965

Keywords

definitions; corporate social responsibility; corporate sustainability; sustainable development goals; sustainability

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CSR is the best term for focusing on individual business organizations, corporate sustainability is an organization level environmental policy, sustainable development is a public policy, and sustainability encompasses global, local, and organizational levels.
The terms corporate social responsibility (CSR), sustainability, sustainable development and corporate sustainability (CS) are critical terms for developing, analysing and evaluating public and private policy goals. These terms are used to make decisions about investment, policy development, and strategy creation. The terms emerged in different fields of endeavour at different points in time. Accordingly, they have different meanings; however, over time they have come to be used interchangeably mixing up policy agendas, confusing managers, regulators, activists and the public at large. We demonstrate that CSR is the best term for focusing on individual business organisations, corporate sustainability is an organisation level environmental policy, sustainable development is a public policy, and sustainability is the broadest term encompassing global local and organisational levels.

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