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Building: Faculty of Arts, Floor: 1, Room: FA111
Thursday 09:00 - 10:40 CEST (08/09/2016)
Despite perennial interest in the political role of corporations, scholars remain under-informed about why and how corporate actors participate outside the market place. This lacuna partially stems from the fact that separate research programs have developed around corporate lobbying, political finance, and the politics of corporate social responsibility (CSR). While all of these modes of non‐market activity engage the corporation’s non-market environment, it remains unclear how they relate to each other: How do corporations combine lobbying, party and campaign finance, and normative expectations of corporate citizenship? How do activities in one area affect strategies in the other? And how do these activities and their relationships vary with institutional context? The panel brings together comparative quantitative analyses of business and politics across a wide range of corporate political strategies and political systems. Between them, the individual contributions cover the major forms of corporate non-market behaviour as well as dozens of countries around the world.
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Large Firm Interactions with Policymakers at Multiple Levels of European Governance | View Paper Details |
Normative Power Markets: The Uneven Embedding of Sustainability Norms in Global Markets | View Paper Details |
Grooming for Politics: How Corporations Combine Lobbying with Social Responsibility | View Paper Details |
Board Of Thrones: Towards a Comprehensive Theory of the Value of Political Co-optation | View Paper Details |
Lobbying Alone? A Comparative Study on Corporate Political Fragmentation in the European Union and the United States | View Paper Details |