About the Editors viii
Notes on Contributors ix
Acknowledgments xxi
Part I Introduction 1
1 Corporate Social Responsibility and Communication 3
Øyvind Ihlen, Jennifer L. Bartlett and Steve May
2 The Paradoxes of Communicating Corporate Social Responsibility
23
Sandra Waddock and Bradley K. Googins
Part II Field Overviews 45
3 Management, Communication, and Corporate Social Responsibility
47
Jennifer L. Bartlett and Bree Devin
4 Public Relations and Corporate Social Responsibility 67
Jennifer L. Bartlett
5 Organizational Communication and Corporate Social
Responsibility 87
Steve May
6 Marketing and Corporate Social Responsibility 110
Peggy Simcic Brønn
7 Reputation Management and Corporate Social Responsibility
128
Mark Eisenegger and Mario Schranz
8 Rhetoric and Corporate Social Responsibility 147
Øyvind Ihlen
Part III Corporate Social Responsibility Communication in Action 167
Concepts and Aspects
9 Ethics: Corporate Social Responsibility, Power and Strategic
Communication 170
Jacquie L’Etang, Jairo Lugo-Ocando and Zeti Azreen Ahmad
10 Risk Communication and Corporate Social Responsibility: The
Essence of Sound Management for Risk Bearers, Generators and
Arbiters 188
Michael J. Palenchar, Tatjana M. Hocke and Robert L. Heath
11 Trust and Credibility as the Basis of Corporate Social
Responsibility: (Mass-) Mediated Construction of Responsibility and
Accountability 208
Günter Bentele and Howard Nothhaft
12 Corporate Social Responsibility Communication and Dialogue
231
Urša Golob and Klement Podnar
13 Transparency and Neoliberal Logics of Corporate Economic and
Social Responsibility 252
Majia Holmer Nadesan
14 The Concept of Stakeholders and its Relevance for Corporate
Social Responsibility Communication 276
Juliana Raupp
15 Significance of Sector-Specific Corporate Social
Responsibility Initiatives: Status and Role in Different Sectors
295
Augustine Pang, Angela Mak and Joanne Mui-Hean Lee
Tools and Processes
16 Corporate (Social) Responsibility and Issues Management:
Motive and Rationale for Issue Discourse and Organizational Change
316
Robert L. Heath and Michael J. Palenchar
17 Communicating Corporate Social Responsibility through
Nonfinancial Reports 338
Elise Perrault Crawford and Cynthia Clark Williams
18 Communicating Corporate Social Responsibility through the
Internet and Social Media 358
Paul Capriotti
19 Communicating Corporate Social Responsibility through
Corporate Image Advertising 379
Alan A. Pomering
20 New Partnerships for a New Generation of Corporate Social
Responsibility 399
Melissa J. Bator and Cynthia Stohl
21 Media Relations and Corporate Social Responsibility 423
Craig E. Carroll
22 NGOs as Communicative Actors within Corporate Social
Responsibility Efforts 445
Sarah E. Dempsey
23 Communication and Corporate Social Responsibility: A
Storytelling Perspective 467
Stefan Wehmeier and Friederike Schultz
Part IV Commentaries and Conclusions 489
24 Interrogating the Communicative Dimensions of Corporate
Social Responsibility 491
Lars Thøger Christensen and George Cheney
25 A Provocation: Thinking the “Social” into Corporate Social
Responsibility 505
Shirley Leitch and Judy Motion
26 Commentary: The View from Management 516
Güler Aras and David Crowther
27 The View from Organizational Studies: A Discourse-Based
Understanding of Corporate Social Responsibility and Communication
534
David Grant and Daniel Nyberg
28 Conclusions and Take Away Points 550
Øyvind Ihlen, Jennifer L. Bartlett and Steve May
Name Index 572
Subject Index 580
Oyvind Ihlen is Associate Professor of Journalism atthe University of Oslo and Professor of Communication andManagement at Hedmark University College. His publications include Public Relations and Social Theory: Key Figures and Ideas(ed. with B. van Ruler & M. Fredriksson, 2009). Jennifer Bartlett is Senior Lecturer at the School ofAdvertising, Marketing and Public Relations, Queensland Universityof Technology. She has published widely on corporate socialresponsibility and legitimacy. Steve May is Associate Professor of Communication Studiesat the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. His booksinclude The Debate Over Corporate Social Responsibility (ed.with G. Cheney & J. Roper, 2007) and The Handbook ofCommunication Ethics (ed. with G. Cheney & D. Munshi,2010).
Summing Up: Recommended. Research and facultycollections. (Choice, 1 March 2012) "If the publication of a handbook represents both thecrystallization of research into a movement or field as well asserving as a platform for future studies, then this handsome andthorough title certainly serves both purposes well. (Communication Director, 1 December 2011) "An impressive, accessible volume that includes writing by asignificant group of international scholars and practitioners, thishandbook will prove instructive to CSR practitioners and studentsalike." (Ethical Corporation Magazine, 1 July 2011)
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