4.7 Article

Explicit and implicit corporate social responsibility: Differences in the approach to stakeholder engagement activities of US and Japanese companies

Journal

BUSINESS STRATEGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT
Volume 28, Issue 6, Pages 1121-1130

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/bse.2306

Keywords

cross-cultural CSR; CSR in the United States and Japan; institutional theory and CSR; stakeholder engagement activities; stakeholder management; stakeholder management in the United States and Japan

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This study uses the theoretical frameworks of institutional theory and comparative capitalism to demonstrate how cross-cultural differences in national institutional frameworks are related to differences in the meaning and the nature of corporate social responsibility (CSR) and, as a result, how they create different incentives and opportunities for companies to engage in stakeholder management activities. More specifically, we draw upon the framework of explicit and implicit CSRs to investigate whether and how stakeholder management practices and programs differ between the United States and Japan. We first develop and validate a Stakeholder Engagement Activities (SEAs) scale, designed assess differences in the approach (explicit or implicit) that companies use to address a variety of common SEAs. Then we analyze data and present the results of surveys collected from 227 companies in the United States and Japan. We find that although the SEAs of American companies are characterized by strong explicit CSR, in contrast, the SEAs of Japanese companies exhibit strong implicit CSR. In the discussion that follows, we attribute these distinctions in the SEAs to differences in the configuration of political, economic, and market mechanisms in each country. The findings of this study contribute to a more nuanced understanding of the differences in prevailing CSR practices of American and Japanese companies than noted by previous researchers. From a practitioner's perspective, the findings of this study reveal that despite the global nature of CSR, stakeholder management practices are both interpreted and operationalized differently due to differences in national institutional frameworks.

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