Making Social Issues Count: How Businesses Make Responsible Strategic Decisions

2015 
In this paper, we investigate how social issues are addressed in strategic decisions. Social issues are events, developments and trends that affect human health and welfare. The rational, calculating processes often used in strategic decision-making do not always extend well to the normative, soft aspects of social issues, yet most strategic decisions involve social issues. By understanding how social issues surface in strategic decisions, we can shed light on how corporations integrate social responsibility into strategic decisions. We investigated this phenomenon by interviewing 137 senior executives of 19 Canadian firms and asking them to describe a recent strategic decision and how the decision was reached. By analyzing their narratives, we found that some managers framed social issues narrowly to reflect business interests, whereas others framed social issues broadly to reflect business and societal interests. We propose that the managers that framed social issues more narrowly worked in organization...
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