The relationship between corporate social responsibility and shareholder value: an empirical test of the risk management hypothesis
Brigham Young University · University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Abstract
Abstract Do shareholders gain when managers disperse corporate resources through activities classified as corporate social responsibility (CSR)? Strategy scholars have recently developed a theoretical model that links such activities to shareholder value when a firm suffers a negative event; we test key portions of this theory of the ‘insurance‐like’ property of CSR activity. We posit that such activity leads to positive attributions from stakeholders, who then temper their negative judgments and sanctions toward firms because of this goodwill. We extend the risk management model by theorizing that some types of CSR activities will be more likely to create goodwill and offer insurance‐like protection than…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 67.22
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 88
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Goodwill
- Corporate social responsibility
- Shareholder
- Business
- Shareholder value
- Attribution
- Value (mathematics)
- Sanctions