Organizing Transnational AccountabilityChristina Garsten Edward Elgar Publishing, 2008. gada 1. janv. - 296 lappuses In the expanding academic literature on accountability, there remains significant ambiguity about the scope and content of this concept. Bostr”m and Garsten have performed an invaluable service to scholars by providing a fresh focus on how accountability |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 62.
xii. lappuse
... held visiting fellowships at the Institute for Advanced Study , Berlin and at All Souls College , Oxford ( 2000 ) . He is a member of the risk management committee of the London School of Economics and , since May 2005 , is a non ...
... held visiting fellowships at the Institute for Advanced Study , Berlin and at All Souls College , Oxford ( 2000 ) . He is a member of the risk management committee of the London School of Economics and , since May 2005 , is a non ...
1. lappuse
... Accountability is a sought-after ideal, yet a fuzzy concept, leading to many definitional struggles: for whom and for what should the actor be accountable? In a transnational political and organizational context, accountability no ...
... Accountability is a sought-after ideal, yet a fuzzy concept, leading to many definitional struggles: for whom and for what should the actor be accountable? In a transnational political and organizational context, accountability no ...
4. lappuse
... accountability on the agenda. The widely endorsed normative idea of the duty of states to ensure account- ability of state agencies and other organizations has become increasingly challenged by global forces (Held and Koenig-Archibugi ...
... accountability on the agenda. The widely endorsed normative idea of the duty of states to ensure account- ability of state agencies and other organizations has become increasingly challenged by global forces (Held and Koenig-Archibugi ...
5. lappuse
... accountable actors for the execution of public policy . In this muddle of complex , global relations among interdependent actors of various types , we may ask : ' Which groups are held accountable to whom , to what principles and in ...
... accountable actors for the execution of public policy . In this muddle of complex , global relations among interdependent actors of various types , we may ask : ' Which groups are held accountable to whom , to what principles and in ...
8. lappuse
... accountable , they are denoted ' would - be - principals ' . Yet , is the ... accountable because the principal is providing legitimacy or financial resources ... held internally accountable to their shareholders, with greater or lesser ...
... accountable , they are denoted ' would - be - principals ' . Yet , is the ... accountable because the principal is providing legitimacy or financial resources ... held internally accountable to their shareholders, with greater or lesser ...
Saturs
1 | |
regulating social accountability for global business | 27 |
3 ISO expands its business into Social Responsibility | 46 |
the Forest Stewardship Council as a good governance model | 61 |
corporate selfpresentations in response to public criticism | 80 |
6 Watchdogs beyond control? The accountability of accounting standards organizations | 98 |
accountability for what and to whom? | 114 |
organizing accountability in EU employment policy | 131 |
the Swedish code of corporate governance | 160 |
four challenges to environmental disclosure | 177 |
12 Accountability public involvement and irreversibility | 194 |
13 The antinomy of accountability | 210 |
14 The treadmill of accountability | 231 |
organizing transnational accountability | 250 |
Index | 255 |
from doing the right thing to doing the thing right | 147 |
Citi izdevumi - Skatīt visu
Organizing Transnational Accountability Christina Garsten,Magnus Boström Priekšskatījums nav pieejams - 2008 |
Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
ability accountability arrangements accountability tools accounting standards action actors agenda argue auditing auditors authority Boström boundaries Brent Spar Brunsson certification schemes challenges Chapter citizens Code Commission companies conflicts consumers corporate governance corporate social responsibility critical cultural debate decisions democratic disclosure discussion Edward Elgar employment environment environmental governance European evaluate example expertise experts firms forest Forest Stewardship Council framing Garsten Global Compact groups Gulbrandsen held accountable human rights industry interests International involved issues Jacobsson labour market legitimacy legitimate ments networks NGOs Norms nuclear waste organizational Oskarshamn participation Pellizzoni perspective political problems public consultations question regulation regulatory relation relationships representatives risk role rules Sarbanes-Oxley Act Shell stakeholders standard setters standard setting standards organizations Stockholm School suppliers Swedish Tamm Hallström tions transnational corporations transparency triple bottom line UN Global Compact voluntary