A Moral Consideration of Corporate-Social-Responsibility (CSR) on the Basis of the Conception of Stephen R. Perry’s Risk, Harm, and Responsibility

Authors

  • Vincent Heidinger University of Graz

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33423/jlae.v18i3.4409

Keywords:

leadership, accountability, ethics, corporate-social-responsibility, nature of risk, agent-imposed risk, corporate-imposed risk, avoidability, foreseeability

Abstract

The goal is to develop a moral consideration of CSR. The nature of risk is examined and a distinction in epistemic conception of probability is introduced. The central question, namely if agent-imposed risk has to be regarded as a form of damage in its own right is introduced and applied to the issue of CSR. The modified question if corporation-imposed risk on society can be viewed as a form of damage comes into play. The terms of avoidability and foreseeability are added to the moral concept. The goal is to show that corporations hold a certain responsibility to society.

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Published

2021-08-05

How to Cite

Heidinger, V. (2021). A Moral Consideration of Corporate-Social-Responsibility (CSR) on the Basis of the Conception of Stephen R. Perry’s Risk, Harm, and Responsibility. Journal of Leadership, Accountability and Ethics, 18(3). https://doi.org/10.33423/jlae.v18i3.4409

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