Corporate social responsibility and human resource management: A systematic review and conceptual analysis

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hrmr.2015.12.003Get rights and content

Highlights

  • The article provides a systematic review of research linking CSR and HRM (CSR–HRM)

  • It identifies key themes at the intersection of CSR–HRM

  • It develops a typology of CSR–HRM research that can guide theory building and future research

  • It proposes a political view on CSR–HRM as the perspective most suitable to address challenges for a socially conscious HRM

Abstract

Despite a significant increase in research and practise linking corporate social responsibility (CSR) and human resource management (HRM), a comprehensive examination of the relationship between these two constructs has yet to be undertaken. Scholars associating CSR and HRM rarely explicate their understanding of the connection between CSR and HRM (CSR–HRM) or the assumptions they make when exploring this relationship. Thus, we argue that a comprehensive review of the literature of the CSR–HRM nexus is relevant and necessary. Such a review would allow scholars to reach more explicit and comprehensive understandings of CSR–HRM, and enhance research both theoretically and empirically. We address this endeavour by means of a systematic review and conceptual analysis of past and current writings linking CSR and HRM, based on key themes and meta-theoretical commitments at the intersection of CSR–HRM. We propose three theoretical perspectives that can be used to conceptualize CSR–HRM: instrumental, social integrative and political. We elaborate on the potential these three approaches hold for research in the field of CSR–HRM. The contribution of this paper is to expose the diversity of understandings of CSR–HRM and provide a conceptual map for navigating and planning further research.

Keywords

Corporate social responsibility
Human resource management
Political CSR
Political HRM
Systematic review
Employee involvement

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