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Corporations
must look
at social values: Prof
Monday, January 16, 2006
- Craig Anderson
Owing to recent high-profile
scandals, consumer vigilance and increasing
stakeholder pressure, many corporations are
becoming more socially responsible, displaying
greater accountability to the communities
and individuals they impact.
Ann Armstrong, professor and
director of the Social
Enterprise Initiative at U of T, hopes
that this trend isn’t window dressing,
but rather that it reflects a coming sea change
in corporate mentality towards a greater social
orientation and value-driven business practices.
“Corporations now have
to look – at the least – at practicing
social values. They are a part of civil society
and have to look at stakeholder interests,”
says Armstrong. “I hope it’s genuine
and that it becomes pervasive.”
Armstrong, along with doctoral
candidate Laurie
Mook and Professor Jack Quarter from Ontario
Institute for Studies in Education, will take
part in an extensive $1.75 million dollar,
five-year study of Ontario’s social
economy, part of a larger $9 million nation-wide
study sponsored by SSHRC and Imagine Canada,
an umbrella organization for non-profits in
Canada. Five research networks will be established
across the country.
Quarter has also established
The
Social Economy Centre, a multi-disciplinary
research and policy unit of OISE.
Changing the corporate climate
to one that is more socially responsible is
difficult, says Armstrong, because of the
typical impatience shown toward systemic change.
“The process is often
very slow, and people get frustrated when
things aren’t taking immediately,”
she says.
Projects like Rotman
Nexus, a U of T student-run consulting
agency for the non-profit sector, aim at changing
the economy at the source by inspiring graduate
students to consider working in the social
mission sector.
“Rotman Nexus is an exemplar,
and a sign that change is coming very, very
soon,” says Armstrong. She points out
an increase in MBA students coming from a
variety of sectors (such as micro credit)
that place a great emphasis on social responsibility
and the role of the social sector (Canada
has an estimated 175,000 to 200,000 non-profit
organizations that generate $90 billion a
year and employ 1.3 million people) in the
Canadian economy.
“Students with an inclination
to social values can have a profound effect
on their colleagues,” says Armstrong.
Armstrong’s own background
as a long-time volunteer in social service
organizations has fuelled her academic focus
and professorial work.
“This is a very exciting
opportunity to be involved with upcoming leaders
in social mission issues,” says Armstrong.
Armstrong hopes that innovative
companies that are profit-oriented but socially
driven – such as Bullfrog Power, a green
electricity retailer – will become to
be seen as a new type of socially responsible
company.
Other undervalued sectors –
like co-ops – will be highlighted during
the course of the five year research initiative.
“In Canada we have a vibrant
co-op culture,” says Armstrong. “And
the government has begun to look at public
policy that pays attention to social mission
organizations. It could become a broader trend.”
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