Location
Nottingham, United Kingdom
Organized by
Nottingham University Business School
There is need to address further
the following questions:
- What is the role of corporations in eradicating
extreme poverty?
- What are the implications of businesses taking on
responsibility for poverty alleviation and development?
- What constitutes ‘business’ and ‘poverty’ and how different
types of businesses may affect different aspects of poverty?
- What motivates companies to tackle poverty in local
communities? What types of institutional logic inform
corporate innovation in community development?
- How do corporations impact sustainable community
development, and to what extent is sustainable community
development central to the business strategy in across
industry sectors?
- How do corporations integrate the ‘sustainable community
development’ agenda into the organisation? How are
poverty alleviation issues incorporated in the corporate
strategy? How is a ‘community development’ innovation
culture built, diffused, and sustained in organisations?
- How are corporations engaging in promoting institutions
that are fundamental for local communities’ participation in
development processes?
- In what ways are corporations meaningfully engaging state
and non-state actors in poverty alleviation and development
through their CCI programmes? What organisational forms
support or facilitate corporate social action that works to
ameliorate poverty?
- What market mechanisms promote and enhance sustainable
livelihoods in the community?
- What are the limits of market mechanisms for sustainable
community development, and how might these challenges
be resolved?
- What are the a) ethical, and b) governance dilemmas of
businesses taking on responsibility for poverty alleviation?
- How do we measure social impact of corporate community
development?
- How can ‘sustainable community development initiatives’ be
scaled-up, and what are the boundaries?