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Original Articles

The rise of CSR: implications for HRM and employee representation

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Pages 953-973 | Published online: 29 Apr 2009
 

Abstract

Against the backdrop of the neo-institutionalist and national business systems approaches to the global–local question in international management, this paper discusses the implications of the rise of CSR in continental Europe for HRM and employee representation. Europe is undoubtedly subject to convergence processes, not least through the emergence of global CSR tools, yet the influence of national business systems remains visible too, as European companies tend to foreground different aspects of CSR to Anglo-American ones. Both HR managers and employee representatives are jostling for positions to shape the resulting adaptation processes. This situation highlights not only the importance of first-mover advantages in such a contested terrain but also the need for both HRM and employee representatives to gain internal legitimacy before being able to play an active role in CSR.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank Gina Ebner and Dirk Ameel of Eurocadres, Brussels, for coordinating the research project that underlies this paper, Luc van Liederkerke, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Céline Louche, Vlerick Leuven Gent Management School, and Julienne Brabet, Université Paris 12, for their work on the Belgian and French case studies we were able to draw on and last but not least the anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments on the paper.

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