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A finalist for the 2020 SIM Best Book Award, this book examines corporate citizenship through the inter-organizational relationships between a public American doctoral research university and six of its corporate partners. The author discusses why US corporations engage as corporate citizens in relationships with higher education institutions and gauges the ethical concerns that may arise from such relationships. As governments continue to cut funding, support from individuals and corporations becomes continually more important. This research contributes to the corporate citizenship literature…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
A finalist for the 2020 SIM Best Book Award, this book examines corporate citizenship through the inter-organizational relationships between a public American doctoral research university and six of its corporate partners. The author discusses why US corporations engage as corporate citizens in relationships with higher education institutions and gauges the ethical concerns that may arise from such relationships. As governments continue to cut funding, support from individuals and corporations becomes continually more important. This research contributes to the corporate citizenship literature by providing a broad, holistic discussion to understand the range of motives and ROI expectations of corporate engagement in the American society as evidenced by inter-organizational relationships with higher education. This book is useful to provide both researchers and practitioners in corporations and higher education with insights to better design and manage inter-organizationalrelationships.

Autorenporträt
Morgan R. Clevenger is an award-winning professor and researcher. Clevenger is Professor of Management and Post-doctoral Fellow in Corporate Social Responsibility and Global Business Ethics at Monarch Business School, Switzerland, and is erstwhile tenured Associate Professor of Entrepreneurship in the Jay S. Sidhu School of Business and Leadership at Wilkes University, USA. His present research interests include corporate citizenship, entrepreneurship, entrepreneurial ecosystems and communities, organizational behavior, family business, and nonprofit management.