What are the distinctions between corporate social responsibility, business responsibility and philanthropy, and how can a framework be devised to聽help businesses define their role in human rights accountability? These are just some the questions that will be tackled today in a lecture by Professor , director of Australia鈥檚 Centre for Applied Philosophy & Public Ethics.
The talk will be held from 1:30 to 3pm in 305 91亚色 Lanes Offices, Keele campus.
Campbell will argue that the structure of a traditional corporate 鈥渂usiness case鈥 should be supplemented by a human rights justification which permits 鈥 and may require 鈥 a corporation to act
independently of its economic interests when this is necessary to fulfill its human rights responsibilities.
Right: Tom Campbell
Campbell, a law and philosophy professor whose fields of interest include justice and human rights, business ethics and the legal theory of ethical positivism, is also the author of eight books on law and ethics: Adam Smith's Science of Morals (Allen & Unwin, 1971); Seven Theories of Human Society (Oxford University Press, 1981); The Left and Rights: A Conceptual Analysis of the Idea of Socialist Rights (Routledge, 1983); Mental Illness: Prejudice, Discrimination and the Law (Dartmouth, 1991); The Legal Theory of Ethical Positivism (Dartmouth, 1996); Prescriptive Legal Positivism (UCL Press/Cavendish, 2004); Rights: A Critical Introduction (Routledge, 2006); and Justice (Palgrave, 2010).
This event is sponsored by the , Schulich School of Business,聽The Hennick Centre for Business and Law, the (CBERN) and the Ontario Legal Philosophy Partnership.
Visit the website to RSVP, or for more information contact Hilary Martin, CBERN鈥檚 research and outreach coordinator, at hmartin@cbern.ca.
Republished courtesy of YFile 鈥 91亚色鈥檚 daily e-bulletin.
