Corporate Citizenship for a Global Firm
Lecturers
ADACHI TOMOHIKO
ALDASHEV GANI
Aim of the course
Beyond the
market environment, around a firm there exists its non-market environment:
regulation, politics, activists, and so on. Managers without an adequate
understanding of these subjects can prepare an unbalanced business strategy,
with potentially harsh consequences for the operation of their enterprises.
This course
is an introduction to the non-market business environment. It starts by giving
students the tools from political science which are necessary for building
non-market strategies. It then proceeds by defining the non-market environment
of business and describing what an integrated business strategy is. Third, it
presents the non-market strategies of business in public politics sphere, with
applications to regulation and environmental protection. Next, it discusses
“private politics”: the operation of firms and of an industry under the
pressure by activists. The course concludes by studying recent findings in the
positive analysis of corporate social responsibility.
Syllabus
- Tools from political science
(16 hours):
- Collective action, prisoner’s
dilemma, and free-rider problem
- Majority-rule institutions and
the median voter theorem
- Legislative bargaining
- Lobbying
- Campaign contributions
- Bureaucracy
- Non-market environment of
business and integrated strategy (6 hours)
- Business and public politics
(18 hours)
- Majority-building strategies
- Electoral strategies
- Regulation
- Environmental protection
- Business and private politics
(4 hours)
- Corporate social responsibility
(4 hours)
Examinations
The
evaluation consists of two mid-terms and a final exam. Each mid-term accounts
for 30% of the final grade, while the final exam accounts for 40% of the final
grade. Mid-terms and the final exam consist of multiple-choice and open
questions.
Reading list
The main
texts for the course are Kenneth Shepsle and Mark Boncheck, Analyzing Politics: Rationality, Behavior,
and Institutions, WW Norton, 1997 and David Baron, Business and Its Environment, 5th ed. Prentice Hall,
2006. The chapters from these texts will be supplemented with journal articles.