Results 221 to 230 of about 69,787 (329)
Benefit Corporations: The Moral Legitimacy That Requires More Rules
ABSTRACT This study examines why Italian for‐profit firms convert to Benefit Corporation status and how they navigate the ensuing hybridization. Survey data from 118 companies are interpreted through a pragmatic and moral legitimacy lens. Results show that the main trigger is pragmatic legitimacy: managers seek to strengthen trust with internal and ...
Laura Rocca +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Birth in Prison: Systemic Discrimination Barriers to Acknowledging the Legal Personhood of the Child
Robin F. Hansen
openalex +2 more sources
An Eco‐Social Lens on Voice for Undervoiced and Unvoiced Stakeholders
ABSTRACT This conceptual paper argues it is important from an ecological–social (eco‐social) whole system point of view for businesses and policymakers to take the interests of and impacts on unvoiced and undervoiced [un(der)voiced] stakeholders into consideration for both strategic and justice reasons.
Sandra Waddock
wiley +1 more source
Periviable birth: Legal landscape in Indian jurisprudence. [PDF]
Diggikar S, Nagesh K, Batra N.
europepmc +1 more source
Rehabilitating Bioethics: Recontextualizing In Vitro Fertilization outside Contractual Autonomy [PDF]
Lin, Olivia
core +1 more source
ABSTRACT This study integrates multidimensional sustainability indicators into a unified assessment approach to evaluate circular strategies in agri‐food industry businesses. This methodological approach is applied to empirically examine the case of the olive oil industry's by‐product valorization.
David Polonio +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Human Stem Cell-Based Embryo Models in Implantation Research: Regulation, Consistency and Potential. [PDF]
Holm S.
europepmc +1 more source
How Supply Networks Influence Sustainable Innovation: Evidence From Ghana's Public Works Procurement
ABSTRACT Recent environmental and sustainability standards in procurement increase short‐term production and operational costs to suppliers, which are often recouped by charging price premiums for innovative solutions. However, public buyers are less likely to pay such price premiums, resulting in a disincentive among suppliers to bid for innovation ...
Peter Adjei‐Bamfo +5 more
wiley +1 more source

