English, asked by mahalkoh014, 19 days ago

you should be able to ask for legal when the rights your country grants you are not respected

Answers

Answered by Joshitha67848
1

Answer:

The subject of this book is corporate social responsibility (CSR), a broad term that refers generally to the ethical role of the corporation in society. Before we define CSR more precisely and before we explore in depth a number of case studies that illustrate aspects of the ethical role of corporations, we first need to understand exactly what corporations are, why they exist, and why they have become so powerful.

Today, the global role of corporations rivals that of national or local governments. In 2000, it was reported that, of the 100 largest economic organizations in the world, 51 were corporations and 49 were countries.1 General Motors, Walmart, Exxon, and Daimler Chrysler all ranked higher than the nations of Poland, Norway, Finland and Thailand (in terms of economic size, comparing corporate revenues with national gross domestic product, or GDP). This trend has continued, and for the past decade, 40 to 50 of the world’s 100 largest economic organizations have been corporations, with the rest being national economies. In 2012, Walmart was the twenty-fifth largest economic organization in the world, putting it ahead of 157 countries.2

Explanation:

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Answered by nidaeamann
0

Explanation:

Corporate social responsibility (CSR) has become one of the critical business practices of modern age. With the passage of time, people are getting aware of their rights because of education, awareness being raised by NGO's and hence people now know where to go if their rights are not being granted whether they are related to CSR, legal rights, rights of freedom etc.  

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