Corporate social responsibility communication in social networking sites: unfinalisable and dialogical processes of legitimation

Building upon constitutive models of corporate social responsibility (CSR) communication, which appreciate the role of both organisations and stakeholders in constructing CSR, this thesis suggests that understanding of CSR is on-going and emergent through unfinalisable legitimation processes in soci...

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Main Author: Glozer, Sarah Alice
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28469/
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author Glozer, Sarah Alice
author_facet Glozer, Sarah Alice
author_sort Glozer, Sarah Alice
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Building upon constitutive models of corporate social responsibility (CSR) communication, which appreciate the role of both organisations and stakeholders in constructing CSR, this thesis suggests that understanding of CSR is on-going and emergent through unfinalisable legitimation processes in social networking sites (SNSs). Constructed upon management research that has examined discursive legitimation processes, this thesis shifts away from CSR communications research into websites, CSR reports and press releases, to descriptively investigate discourse within interaction (dialogue) in the textually rich SNS context. The thesis contributes to the CSR literature by challenging conventional definitions of legitimacy, which suggest that objective, legitimacy ‘realities’ are espoused from ‘transmission’ (sender-orientated) models of communication, to offer interpretations of legitimation processes rooted within discursive and dialogical constructionism. In exploring how discursive legitimation occurs in contemporary networked societies across four UK-based retailers: the Co-operative, Lidl, Marks and Spencer and Sainsbury’s, findings capture the ‘centripetal’ (unifying) forces of normalisation, moralisation and mytholigisation at play in organisation-stakeholder dialogue across the SNSs, but also the ‘centrifugal’ (dividing) forces of authorisation, demythologisation and carnivalisation. These findings problematise the consensual tone of legitimacy as organisation-society ‘congruence’ and reveal the shifting and contradictory expectations that surround CSR. Within a Bakhtinian (1981, 1986) conception of dialogue, the findings most markedly reveal perpetuality (unfinalisability) in CSR communication and the impossibility of exhausting relations in polyphonic (multi-vocal) SNS environments, characterised by ‘dispersed authority.’ Furthermore, in conceptualising SNSs as interactive, agential and co-constructed organisational ‘texts’, findings also illuminate the performative (constructive) nature of SNSs in organising and (re)constituting CSR through organisation-stakeholder dialogue. This thesis provides a framework for understanding legitimation processes in SNSs, with implications for theory and practice.
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spelling nottingham-284692025-02-28T11:33:46Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28469/ Corporate social responsibility communication in social networking sites: unfinalisable and dialogical processes of legitimation Glozer, Sarah Alice Building upon constitutive models of corporate social responsibility (CSR) communication, which appreciate the role of both organisations and stakeholders in constructing CSR, this thesis suggests that understanding of CSR is on-going and emergent through unfinalisable legitimation processes in social networking sites (SNSs). Constructed upon management research that has examined discursive legitimation processes, this thesis shifts away from CSR communications research into websites, CSR reports and press releases, to descriptively investigate discourse within interaction (dialogue) in the textually rich SNS context. The thesis contributes to the CSR literature by challenging conventional definitions of legitimacy, which suggest that objective, legitimacy ‘realities’ are espoused from ‘transmission’ (sender-orientated) models of communication, to offer interpretations of legitimation processes rooted within discursive and dialogical constructionism. In exploring how discursive legitimation occurs in contemporary networked societies across four UK-based retailers: the Co-operative, Lidl, Marks and Spencer and Sainsbury’s, findings capture the ‘centripetal’ (unifying) forces of normalisation, moralisation and mytholigisation at play in organisation-stakeholder dialogue across the SNSs, but also the ‘centrifugal’ (dividing) forces of authorisation, demythologisation and carnivalisation. These findings problematise the consensual tone of legitimacy as organisation-society ‘congruence’ and reveal the shifting and contradictory expectations that surround CSR. Within a Bakhtinian (1981, 1986) conception of dialogue, the findings most markedly reveal perpetuality (unfinalisability) in CSR communication and the impossibility of exhausting relations in polyphonic (multi-vocal) SNS environments, characterised by ‘dispersed authority.’ Furthermore, in conceptualising SNSs as interactive, agential and co-constructed organisational ‘texts’, findings also illuminate the performative (constructive) nature of SNSs in organising and (re)constituting CSR through organisation-stakeholder dialogue. This thesis provides a framework for understanding legitimation processes in SNSs, with implications for theory and practice. 2015-07-07 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28469/1/SGlozer_Thesis.pdf Glozer, Sarah Alice (2015) Corporate social responsibility communication in social networking sites: unfinalisable and dialogical processes of legitimation. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Corporate Social Responsibility communication Dialogue Discourse Legitimacy Social media Social networking sites
spellingShingle Corporate Social Responsibility communication
Dialogue
Discourse
Legitimacy
Social media
Social networking sites
Glozer, Sarah Alice
Corporate social responsibility communication in social networking sites: unfinalisable and dialogical processes of legitimation
title Corporate social responsibility communication in social networking sites: unfinalisable and dialogical processes of legitimation
title_full Corporate social responsibility communication in social networking sites: unfinalisable and dialogical processes of legitimation
title_fullStr Corporate social responsibility communication in social networking sites: unfinalisable and dialogical processes of legitimation
title_full_unstemmed Corporate social responsibility communication in social networking sites: unfinalisable and dialogical processes of legitimation
title_short Corporate social responsibility communication in social networking sites: unfinalisable and dialogical processes of legitimation
title_sort corporate social responsibility communication in social networking sites: unfinalisable and dialogical processes of legitimation
topic Corporate Social Responsibility communication
Dialogue
Discourse
Legitimacy
Social media
Social networking sites
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28469/