A Correlational Study of UK Press Climate Change Discourses and Explicit CSR Reporting: A British Petroleum (BP) case study

The growing literature within the arena of corporate social responsibility (CSR) has broadened both the view and importance of corporate sustainability. In this respect environmental issues remain at the forefront when thinking about social responsibility. For example, the focus of the research in t...

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Main Author: Webb, J A S
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2009
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/23269/
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author Webb, J A S
author_facet Webb, J A S
author_sort Webb, J A S
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The growing literature within the arena of corporate social responsibility (CSR) has broadened both the view and importance of corporate sustainability. In this respect environmental issues remain at the forefront when thinking about social responsibility. For example, the focus of the research in this thesis, is the issue of climate change. For a growing number of years the public has been bombarded with ‘doomsday’ scenarios and mixed messages regarding both the imminent impact and cost of climate change. Perhaps this is due to the media being a major outlet and source of information, and the increasing number of discourses revolving around climate change. Due to the relative size and power of media, the discourses can prove instrumental in framing the general opinion and strategy of major organisations. Using this rationale, coupled with the literature regarding the use of CSR as an explicit reputational management tool, organisations may be paying closer attention to these media discourses. The aim of this research project is to study these phenomena and whether a specific corporation, British Petroleum (BP), has been affected by the persuasive impact of both the media and the nonmarket environment in their explicit reporting. The climate change discourse analysis on the media and the case study of BP, has investigated the relationship between media discourses and explicit CSR reporting. By using this approach the objective is to understand the reactive and/or proactive nature of corporate reporting.
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spelling nottingham-232692018-02-15T16:03:59Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/23269/ A Correlational Study of UK Press Climate Change Discourses and Explicit CSR Reporting: A British Petroleum (BP) case study Webb, J A S The growing literature within the arena of corporate social responsibility (CSR) has broadened both the view and importance of corporate sustainability. In this respect environmental issues remain at the forefront when thinking about social responsibility. For example, the focus of the research in this thesis, is the issue of climate change. For a growing number of years the public has been bombarded with ‘doomsday’ scenarios and mixed messages regarding both the imminent impact and cost of climate change. Perhaps this is due to the media being a major outlet and source of information, and the increasing number of discourses revolving around climate change. Due to the relative size and power of media, the discourses can prove instrumental in framing the general opinion and strategy of major organisations. Using this rationale, coupled with the literature regarding the use of CSR as an explicit reputational management tool, organisations may be paying closer attention to these media discourses. The aim of this research project is to study these phenomena and whether a specific corporation, British Petroleum (BP), has been affected by the persuasive impact of both the media and the nonmarket environment in their explicit reporting. The climate change discourse analysis on the media and the case study of BP, has investigated the relationship between media discourses and explicit CSR reporting. By using this approach the objective is to understand the reactive and/or proactive nature of corporate reporting. 2009-12 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/23269/1/Final_Dissertation_2009_-_John_Webb.pdf Webb, J A S (2009) A Correlational Study of UK Press Climate Change Discourses and Explicit CSR Reporting: A British Petroleum (BP) case study. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)] (Unpublished)
spellingShingle Webb, J A S
A Correlational Study of UK Press Climate Change Discourses and Explicit CSR Reporting: A British Petroleum (BP) case study
title A Correlational Study of UK Press Climate Change Discourses and Explicit CSR Reporting: A British Petroleum (BP) case study
title_full A Correlational Study of UK Press Climate Change Discourses and Explicit CSR Reporting: A British Petroleum (BP) case study
title_fullStr A Correlational Study of UK Press Climate Change Discourses and Explicit CSR Reporting: A British Petroleum (BP) case study
title_full_unstemmed A Correlational Study of UK Press Climate Change Discourses and Explicit CSR Reporting: A British Petroleum (BP) case study
title_short A Correlational Study of UK Press Climate Change Discourses and Explicit CSR Reporting: A British Petroleum (BP) case study
title_sort correlational study of uk press climate change discourses and explicit csr reporting: a british petroleum (bp) case study
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/23269/