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Bibliographical Anthology, International and National Local Initiatives and Internet Sites on Corporate Social Responsibility ABSTRACT: This paper is a review of the most recent and relevant initiatives and publications in the European Union, as well as main international Internet sites, totally or partially concerning corporate social responsibility. 251
Ethics and Economics: the Nemetria Conventions ABSTRACT: Since 1992 Nemetria, active as Training Centre, currently organises conferences held annually on a theme such as the relationship between Ethics and Economics. In these years Nobel prizes, entrepreneurs, politicians and prelates haven given their contribution identifying those values set as the base of a correct interpretation and right development of the relationship between Ethics and Economis. We start on the principle of ethic intended as ethics of the responsibility, being self responsible and extending our responsibility in the world we live. A responsibility connected with the concept of development not only as the ultimate aim but a sort of recognition of the man as promoter and subject of this development. A responsibility connected with the risk which is not uncertainty but rather part of the economic rationality and, finally, the competition not seen as fight to prevail but way of renovation. Solidarity is another element set as priority or better as engine of the behaviour of singles inside the society. A value which should not be intended as organising general charity programs, but rather firm determination to be strongly committed to the common interest. Cinzia Sechi, Sindnova (ed.)
Social Corporate Responsibility: themes and prospects ABSTRACT: The deep-rooted and complex economic and social transformations that have characterized our planet in the last decade have forced companies, as the leading actors in civil society, to evaluate their choices beyond an exclusively economic and financial point of view. In the context of the global development of capitalism, where the sole arbiter of the situation is the market, there is at last a full realization of the necessity to draw business peoples’ attention to their social responsibilities, and above all to place companies in a new context of relations and values with respect to the area where they work. Naturally banks are not exempt from all this. As credit agencies they simply cannot function without taking into consideration the principles and values that are strictly linked to Social Corporate Responsibility. The savings banks sector has always, from the beginning, addressed the issue of social responsibility: by providing incentives to create saving as a presupposition for well-being. From there began the building of social values which reflect the historical role that savings banks have played in society and in local development. It’s clear that Social Corporate Responsibility must be at the basis of the economic behaviour of bank and companies, but it’s also essential not to force on businesses conditions which do not take into consideration the specific geographic and economic circumstances of the area where they work. There is a very strong element of subjectiveness in the definition of socially responsibile behaviour. At this point it must also be emphasized that small and medium-sized companies cannot be excluded from all this because they represent the keystone of our country’s economy. The aim must be for the involvement of a diversity of people who work in the area in question: a culture of social corporate responsibility cannot exist without the widespread involvement of the business community. A final consideration: we currently live in a climate of fast economic development, ever-increasing interdependence among companies and a culture that tends to ascribe responsibility to the law, or at least to collective organizations. All of this leaves individual responsibility too much to one side. On this note it is important not to forget that the categorical imperatives and the abstract definitions of ethical values must bow down before the individual’s sense of moral and civil responsibility, because at the end of the day it is still the individual, protagonist of history, who chooses his or her future and in this way conditions the world.
Business Ethics and Social Responsibility ABSTRACT: For some time now there has been a strong need to define ethical conduct in the business world. This necessity is a manifestation of the loss of certainties which has characterized economic and social life in the last 50 years. The need arises for new rules, adapted to the new course of human history in all of its aspects; rules with universal value for a global world. The important thing to understand, however, is that it is not sufficient that these rules be listed in codes and manuals, necessary those these may be. Such ethical rules must be deeply rooted in the human conscience. This is crucial because it is people, with all their complexity and imperfection who determine the course of history and form the society in which they live. Inevitably, therefore, the central role of people is also the fundamental reference point in the conduct of a business, which must be conceived as a community of individuals united in the pursuit of common, shared objectives. The starting point of this essential way of considering a business lies in recognising the value of the people who operate within the business, regardless of the pressures of productivity and market competition. Particular attention should also be paid to the consequences that the production process has on the natural environment. This issue also brings us back to the principle of the central role of people: the environment is our home and its protection is a very real moral obligation.
La Responsabilità Sociale di impresa in una intervista ad Alessandro Benetton ABSTRACT: Corporate Social Responsibility Social and environmental pressures enormously influence companies’ management decisions. That is why there has been an affirmation of the awareness that apart from the economic dimension a business also has an ethical dimension. It is precisely in relation to this dimension that a profound change has taken place: that of the disintegration of the opposition between the shareholder’s view and the stockholder’s view. Obviously satisfying the interests of investors remains the central and indispensable element of a company’s activity, but now the quest to reach that objective is increasingly linked to a commitment, on the part of managers and business people, to favouring a sustainable development of the area in which the business operates. It is undeniable that the market is the best judge and it is precisely the dynamic nature of the market which lends such complexity to all the variables that characterize the life of a business. The theme of social corporate responsibility is now at the centre of many debates but perhaps, despite this, there is not yet sufficient clarity in the definition of ‘social corporate responsibility’. There is also a certain amount of confusion between issues such as sustainable development, social equity and business ethics: all terms pertaining to Social Corporate Responsibility, but which certainly do not exhaust its meaning. Social responsibility is a guiding principle which transversally concerns all aspects of the life of a company. It is first and foremost a question of moral responsibility, even before legal responsibility. This is sufficient to suggest that the behaviour of financial institutions, such as 21 Investimenti, is not at all neutral with regard to all those who are influenced to a greater or lesser extent by their business activities. It is enough to consider the connection between financial activity and local development, the battle against unemployment or protecting the environment. It is indisputable, then, that financial activity is very closely linked with the huge debate about social corporate responsibility. The important thing in this type of evaluation is the awareness that the value of a company does not depend only on numbers. In the face of definitions and declarations of objectives, it therefore becomes necessary to ask oneself what social responsibility means for a company in its daily business in order to make this the essence of the commitment and the duty that are at the core of the activity and of the development of the company.