Alliance aims to raise the quality of debate

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An attempt to counteract 'lazy thinking' on CSR among academics and business people is to be made by a UK business school and a global supply chain management company.

The Saïd Business School and the Achilles Group say that poor research and ill-informed debate is holding back development, and in consequence businesses 'are unclear about how best to apply [CSR] to day-to-day operations, and business schools struggle to know how best to teach and research it'.

The two have now established a working group 'to raise the level of discussion and to develop thinking relevant to practitioners'.

The group will organize three annual public lectures and four academic seminars to provide a 'forum for the exploration and testing of ideas'. It will publish occasional 'white papers' to stimulate debate, commission case studies to be presented at conferences and 'made available for the teaching of CSR globally', and create online discussion forums and blogs. Graham Baxter, BP's corporate responsibility vice-president, is giving the first lecture this month. All events will be webcast.

Steve New, lecturer in operations management at Saïd Business School and a member of the working group committee, told EP: 'Much of the current debate is locked into lazy thinking. A campaign group seizes upon some perceived evil and stamps its feet demanding something should be done. Then corporations respond by treating the issue as public relations activity, and fill reports and audits with warm and meaningless words.

'Researchers can get cornered into a position that is implicitly either "campaigning", with corporations being portrayed as bad, or "corporate advocacy", where corporations are good', New added.

Saïd Business School is at Oxford University and Achilles is based near the city. Achilles will provide initial funding for two years.

In a separate move, academic institutions have agreed to join forces with the United Nations Global Compact to develop 'Principles for Responsible Business Education' that will inform the teaching of CSR in business schools. Among those that have agreed to take part are the British Academy of Management, the European Academy of Business in Society, Harvard University's Social Enterprise Knowledge Network, and the Caux Round Table.

The Global Compact Office will convene a 50-strong drafting group to finalize the principles in time for the Global Compact Leaders Summit to be held in Geneva in July 2007. A Global Council for Responsible Business Education will then be created to carry them forward.

More than three-quarters of north American MBA students believe classes in CSR should be part of the core curriculum in MBA programmes. A poll of 2100 MBA students in Canada and the US carried out by the Net Impact pressure group found 78 per cent would support such a move.