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Summary Corporate Social Responsibility - Lectures, Book, Tutorial Notes - 2024

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This is a detailed summary for the class Corporate Social Responsibility (6013B0525Y) at UvA. It includes summaries of all necessary chapters (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 13) of the book, Winning Sustainability Strategies. It also covers all guest lectures in detail: (Week 1: Introduction to CSR and Sustainability - Bernd Hendriksen // Week 2: Beyond GDP - Annegeke Jansen // Week 3: Climate Change - Dr. Charbel Moussa // Week 5: Dutch Railways NS - Carola Wijdoogen // Week 5: ESG Risk Management within the Financial Sector - Carola Steenmeijer // Week 6: ESG at KPN - Jeroen Cox // Week 7: Circularity - Jeroen van Muiswinkel & Manon van Ginkel Lastly, it covers relevant topics discussed in tutorials. I hope this helps!

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Summarized whole book?
No
Which chapters are summarized?
Chapter 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 13
Uploaded on
December 13, 2024
Number of pages
84
Written in
2024/2025
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CORPORATE SOCIAL
RESPONSIBILITY
(6013B0525Y)

Lecture, Tutorial, and Book Notes

,Week 1, Lecture 1: Introduction to CSR and Sustainability

CSR and Sustainability
CSR → targets opinion formers → balancing stakeholder interests
Sustainability → holistic approach → considers social, environmental, and economic impacts
ESG → Reporting frameworks



Trends in CSR
Moving from → to…
Company Supply chain
● increasingly mandated by government
bodies/stock exchanges
● Drives adoption among large companies
(especially in sectors with large environmental
impacts - eg. mining, oil).

Environment Social impacts

Check the box Making an impact

Top down Bottom up

Nice to have Need to have

CSR CFO and CEO



Corporate Social Responsibility Hierarchy
Economic Responsibility: produce an acceptable return for investors
Legal Responsibility: act within the framework of laws and regulations drawn up by the government
and judiciary.
Ethical responsibility: to do no harm to stakeholders and within its operating environment
Discretionary responsibility: companies have proactive, strategic behaviors, that benefit
themselves/society
→ Business is assumed to voluntarily have this
→ Unilever, Tony Chocoloney, Patagonia

, Four Archetypes
The four archetypes describe how companies engage with sustainability based on their risk profile,
industry characteristics, and strategic priorities.
Traditional ● High (inherent) risk profile
● Limited sustainability initiatives
● Focus on compliance and using regulations to justify their license to operate
● Sustainability is a defensive tool, not a driver of growth
● Industries like tobacco/weapons

Key takeaway: they see sustainability as a necessary obligation, not as an opportunity
for innovation or competitive advantage

Communicative ● High compliance with ESG standards
● Capturing opportunities is difficult due to high costs
● Focus on risk reduction and compliance
● Industries like automotive industry, insurance

Key takeaway: they comply to sustainability norms and talk about efforts but face
challenges translating sustainability into business

Opportunistic ● Recognize sustainability but have uneven progress across their portfolio
● Creates situations of ‘sustainability schizophrenia’
● Industries like energy, renewables, diversified conglomerates

Key takeaway: try to embrace sustainability but struggle with inconsistencies and high
risk areas in their portfolio

Transformational ● Companies that embrace sustainability in a holistic fashion
● Sustainability programs closely ties to business operations
● They generate new opportunities
● Integrated sustainability into core activities

Key takeaway: companies use sustainability as a holistic strategy for business growth,
risk management, and industry leadership




Materiality Assessment
→ Helps identify and prioritize the sustainability issues that matter most to a business, and the
stakeholders
→ keeps businesses alert to stakeholder concerns and expectations, and issues with greatest risk and
opportunities for the business
Move first where it matters most

, Materiality Assessment Matrix




→ material aspects




X-axis: significance to business (potential impact)
Y-axis: significance to stakeholders (their motivation)



Six Steps Approach to Generate a Materiality Matrix (exam question)
1. Select and assess relevant stakeholders
2. Define a long list of sustainability topics (risks)
3. Rank the topics and create a short list
4. Rate the business impact in terms of risks and opportunities
5. Construct a concept of materiality matrix
6. Get sign off by senior management and document the process

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