Stanford Social Innovation Review

Stanford Social Innovation Review is an award-winning magazine covering best strategies for nonprofits, foundations, and socially responsible businesses. Published quarterly by the Stanford Graduate School of Business.

Articles Tagged With 'Business+ethics'

Date Author Category Title
Summer 2007
Scott C. Beardsley, Sheila Bonini, Lenny Mendonca, & Jeremy Oppenheim
Corporate Social Responsiblity A New Era for Business [Free!]

More and more business leaders recognize that their company’s future is increasingly intertwined with the needs and demands of society. But many executives don’t understand how to manage that changing relationship. In this article, McKinsey & Company consultants provide a model for incorporating sociopolitical issues into the strategic decision-making process.

Summer 2007
Alana Conner
Nonprofit Management Putting Women in Their Place

Which woman is more likely to attract unpleasant sexual attention: the office sweetheart or the ambitious upstart? A new study by social psychologist Jennifer Berdahl points to the upstart. From her findings, Berdahl concludes that “men aren’t harassing women to get into their pants, but to put them down....”

Winter 2008
Jenik Radon, Margo Tatgenhorst Drakos, & Tarek Farouk Maassarani
Human Rights • Corporate Social Responsiblity Getting Human Rights Right

Corporations that violate human rights not only inflict suffering, but also hurt their bottom line. The authors suggest five principles that corporations can follow to improve their human rights footprint.

Summer 2008
Alex Counts
Economic Development • Social Entrepreneurship • Philanthropy & Responsible Investing Reimagining Microfinance [Free!]

Critics of microfinance institutions (MFIs) ask them to choose between helping the poor or making money for investors, but this is a false choice. MFIs can have their impact and profit, too, says the author, the CEO of the Grameen Foundation. He sketches a new vision of microfinance as a platform, not a product; one that relies on high volumes, not high margins, and that uses limits on private benefit, holistic performance standards, and third-party certification to help MFIs meet both their bottom lines.

Summer 2008
Jonathan C. Lewis
Economic Development • Social Entrepreneurship • Corporate Social Responsiblity Microloan Sharks

Commercial microfinance institutions (MFIs) must calculate two bottom lines: alleviating poverty for clients and also generating profits for investors. To achieve the latter goal, some MFIs charge their impoverished clients exorbitant interest rates. The recent Banco Compartamos IPO in Mexico raises a red flag, demonstrating how easily well-intentioned MFIs and their investors can shift from microlending to microloan-sharking.

Summer 2003
Jed Emerson
Philanthropy & Responsible Investing Where Money Meets Mission

Breaking down the firewall between foundation
investments and programming.

Summer 2006
Will Tizard
Social Entrepreneurship Carving out a Niche

A Czech social enterprise uses woodworking to help drug addicts.

Fall 2006
Peter Asmus, Hank Cauley, & Katharine Maroney
Environment • Nonprofit Management • Corporate Social Responsiblity Turning Conflict into Cooperation

The Rainforest Action Network launched an intensive consumer boycott of several Mitsubishi companies, leading to significant changes in the way the Japanese giant and many of its partners do business. That engagement provides critical lessons for both activist NGOs and corporations.

Fall 2006
Dara O'Rourke
Nonprofit Management Buying In or Selling Out?

Socially responsible brands that merge with multinationals may be abandoning their principles

Fall 2006
Catherine Potter
Nonprofit Management • Social Entrepreneurship Weaving Businesses Together [Free!]

Organic Exchange uses its global network to promote environmentally friendly fibers.

Winter 2007
Alana Conner Snibbe
Nonprofit Management Diversity Training Doesn’t Work

How can companies hire and promote more women and minorities?

Winter 2007
Alana Conner Snibbe
Nonprofit Management Vengeance, Interrupted [Free!]

How organizations can inspire reconciliation instead of revenge.

Winter 2007
Jarrett Spiro
Corporate Social Responsiblity Review: The New Capitalists
Spring 2006
David Vogel
Corporate Social Responsiblity Review: The Market for Virtue

The Potential and Limits of Corporate Social Responsibility.

Summer 2007
Alana Conner
Nonprofit Management Learning From Government

What the public sector can teach the nonprofit and business sectors.

Summer 2007
N. Craig Smith
Nonprofit Management Review: Living Into Leadership
Summer 2007
Alana Conner
Corporate Social Responsiblity From the Bottom Line of Our Hearts

Why businesspeople don’t mention values when they discuss social responsibility.

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