Preface Introduction: The End of Corporate Social Responsibility? Welcome to the House of the Blind: What Corporate Social Responsibility Does Not See The Multinational Corporation to the Rescue? Corporate Citizenship Theory Stakeholder Theory and Other Fantasies of the 'Ethical Corporation' The New Opium of the People: Corporate Social Responsibility and the Employee From Propaganda to Parasite? Towards a Critical Political Economy of CSR Conclusion: The Beginning of (Non) Corporate Social Responsibility?
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'The US courts have advised corporations that they should carry out some good works, to deflect the danger that an "aroused public" might inquire into their actions and the enormous privileges granted to them by state power. This wide-ranging study brings to vivid light some of the ways in which the lessons are applied in the practices of "corporate social responsibility," revealing as well how discussion of such "ethical capitalism" often obscures the reality of capitalist ethics and its human consequences. It makes a strong case that the public should be aroused, and offers ideas as to what can be done.' - Noam Chomsky Institute Professor (retired), MIT, Cambridge MA 'This is an important book that offers a much needed critique of what has truly become what the authors call the 'opium of the people': corporate social responsibility. Fleming and Jones offer an incisive and unflinching critique of the religion of CSR' - Bobby Banerjee University of Western Sydney