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Original Articles

Application of upper echelon theory for corporate social responsibility dimensions: Evidence from the restaurant industry

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Pages 387-414 | Received 17 Apr 2017, Accepted 21 Dec 2017, Published online: 03 Jan 2018
 

ABSTRACT

This study applies upper echelon theory and validates its conceptual framework by investigating chief executive officers’ observable determinants (e.g., the age, tenure, and formal education of top managers) of corporate social responsibility (CSR) in the restaurant industry. Multiple CSR dimensions (e.g., operational, non-operational, community, diversity, employee, environment, and product) are examined through fixed effects regression. The results indicate that older and highly educated CEOs who serve more stakeholders perform fewer CSR activities, whereas longer tenured CEOs who serve more stakeholders perform more CSR activities. Consequently, non-operational, community-, diversity-, employee-, and environment-related CSR activities are significantly explained by the proposed attributes. By validating both the theoretical perspectives of upper echelon theory and the role of stakeholder demands in CSR decisions, this research can contribute to expanding the CSR and upper echelon literature to the restaurant industry.

Additional information

Funding

This study was supported by 2016 Research Grant from Kangwon National University

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