possibly of interest . . . 
cheers,
craig

craig k harris
department of sociology
michigan agricultural experiment station
national food safety and toxicology center
institute for food and agriculture standards
food safety policy center
michigan state university




Call for Papers for a Special Issue of Business & Society

The United Nations Global Compact -
Retrospect and Prospect

Guest Editors: Andreas Rasche, Malcolm McIntosh, Sandra Waddock

The United Nations Global Compact now has nearly 
7,000 business and non-business participants, and 
has in its first ten years of life become the 
world's largest corporate citizenship initiative. 
Established by former United Nations 
Secretary-General Kofi Annan in 2000, the 
initiative will celebrate its 10th anniversary in 
2010.  As a central actor on the world stage of 
corporate responsibility and citizenship, the 
Global Compact has played a central role in 
raising the aspirations of companies, NGOs, and 
other actors around the implementation of its ten 
principles, in the areas of human rights, labour 
standards, the environment, and anti-corruption 
(for details about the UN Global Compact and its 
principles, see 
<http://www.unglobalcompact.org/>www.unglobalcompact.org). 
Indeed, some have argued that the Global Compact 
has put corporate responsibility issues, 
particularly those related to the principles, 
onto the agenda of many companies.

Although global in reach and intent (with over 
half of all participants coming from developing 
economies), the Global Compact also established a 
strong presence in local economies through its 
local networks and regional clusters. Driven by 
constant innovation and improvement (e.g. the 
addition of the tenth principle in 2004 and the 
introduction of the Communication on Progress 
policy in 2003), and a sense of learning about 
how to build a better world through enterprise, 
the Global Compact has undergone a variety of 
changes over its existence. It is now poised to 
potentially help its signatories effect 
significant positive change in the future. 
Although the initiative has attracted the 
interest of many businesses and civil society 
organizations, it also faces a lot of critique, 
mostly focusing on the absence of any clear 
compliance standards and the fact that many 
companies appear to sign the Compact without 
making significant changes in their strategies or practice.

To explore the possibilities, potentials, and 
gaps that exist in the Global Compact, this 
Special Issue invites interested researchers to: 
(a) critically assess the last ten years of the 
Global Compact and identify both its achievements 
and the gaps that currently exist and (b) to 
reflect on the future of the initiative by 
discussing remaining challenges and exploring 
future paths of development. We call for papers 
that deal with all aspects and dynamics of the 
Global Compact, ranging from comparative case 
studies, qualitative and quantitative work 
assessing the Compact's performance to date, as 
well as thoughtful essays about the Compact and 
its past, present, or future. We are interested 
in both conceptual and empirical studies that 
draw on a variety of theoretical perspectives 
(e.g. institutional theory, social movement 
theory, network theory), and in quantitative as 
well as qualitative methodological approaches 
that can flesh out our understanding of the 
Compact, particularly efforts to assess the 
Compact's second ten years in light of the 
achievements and problems of the first ten years.

Possible topics for contributions include, but 
are not limited to, the following issues:

*        Analyses of existing achievements and 
remaining challenges with regard to the 
implementation of the ten Global Compact 
principles, and the Compact's other initiatives, partnerships, and
alliances.
*        The relation of the Global Compact to 
other existing and emerging corporate 
responsibility initiatives (e.g., the Global 
Reporting Initiative, Social Accountability 8000, and ISO 26000).
*        The Global Compact's Communication on 
Progress (COP) policy and integrity measures.
*        The development of the Global Compact as 
a network-based corporate responsibility 
initiative combining global issues with local concerns.
*        The Global Compact's role and relationship to global
governance.
*        The development of local networks 
throughout the world and the contribution of 
these networks to implementing the ten principles.
*        The role and impact of specialized 
stakeholders (e.g., academia, unions, NGOs) in 
the development of the Global Compact.
*        The development and impact of Global 
Compact issue platforms such as the Principles 
for Responsible Investment (PRI), the Principles 
for Responsible Management Education (PRME), the 
Caring for Climate leadership initiative and the CEO Water Mandate.
*        The role of the Global Compact as a 
"norm entrepreneur" in a world of diffuse power 
and great instability where social networks are 
increasingly supplementing international negotiating regimes.

Submission Instructions
The format of the papers must follow Business & 
Society contribution guidelines. Business & 
Society uses the American Psychological 
association citation and reference system (please 
see any recent copy of the journal for a sample):
<http://www.sagepub.com/journalsProdManSub.nav?prodId=Journal200878>http
://www.sagepub.com/journalsProdManSub.nav?prodId=Journal200878. 


Papers should include a 100-150 word abstract 
followed by 3 to 5 key-words. The paper itself 
should contain no indications of authorship. A 
title page containing full author contact 
information should be sent as a separate document 
to the coeditors.  The citations and references 
should be APA compliant (see BAS guidelines).

Questions about the Special Issue should be 
addressed to guest editor Andreas Rasche 
(<mailto:andreas.ras...@wbs.ac.uk>andreas.ras...@wbs.ac.uk).

Dates and Timetable
The tentative timetable for the special issue is as follows:

*   April 1, 2010 Paper submitted electronically to coeditors
*   August 1, 2010 authors invited to resubmit revised papers
*   October 30, 2010 Revised papers due 
(incorporating editors' and external  reviewers' comments)
*   January 30, 2011 authors notified if paper selected for special
issue
*   March 31, 2011 Delivery of full set of papers 
and guest editors' introductory paper


Duane Windsor, Ph.D., BAS Editor
The Lynette S. Autrey Professor of Management
The Jesse H. Jones Graduate School of Business
Rice University

Regular Mail:
MS-531 P.O. Box 2932
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