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Successfully managing employees' corporate social performance (CSP) perceptions requires insights into their antecedents. However, not much is currently known on the subject. We contribute to the micro-level corporate social responsibility (CSR) literature in two ways: (a) we investigate the...
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We extend Aguinis and Glavas' (2013) work by focusing on the underlying mechanisms that drive employees' reactions to embedded and peripheral CSR. We draw from attribution theory, and specifically utilize Kelley's (1967) covariation model to explore employee causal reasoning towards the firm's...
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Do employee judgments of their organization’s Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) programs relate to CSR-specific performance and in-role job performance? Can middle managers influence the formation of such judgments and what factors might moderate such cascading influences? To answer these...
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The vast majority of the extant literature on Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) has focused on the macro (firm) level of analysis by examining the linkage between CSR and firm-level outcomes. As such, very few studies have focused on the micro (individual) level of analysis. Against this...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10014194582
Corporate social responsibility (CSR) is gaining momentum among researchers and practitioners. In spite of this extensive interest, systematic research regarding the effects of CSR on other stakeholder groups, besides consumers, remains sparse. Based on a field study in a global Fortune 500...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10014213241