| dc.contributor.author | 
Ngoepe-Ntsoane, Mokgadi 
 | 
 | 
| dc.date.accessioned | 
2023-06-12T08:22:00Z | 
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| dc.date.available | 
2023-06-12T08:22:00Z | 
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| dc.date.issued | 
2023-01-20 | 
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| dc.identifier.citation | 
Ngoepe-Ntsoane, M. J. (2023). Rethinking and reimagining corporate social responsibility as legislation in South Africa using a qualitative document analytics approach. International Journal of Research in Business and Social Science (2147- 4478), 12(1), 01–13. https://doi.org/10.20525/ijrbs.v12i1.2294 | 
en | 
| dc.identifier.issn | 
2147-4478 | 
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| dc.identifier.uri | 
https://doi.org/10.20525/ijrbs.v12i1.2294 | 
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| dc.identifier.uri | 
https://hdl.handle.net/10500/30147 | 
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| dc.description.abstract | 
South African legislation does not obligate companies to fulfill their corporate social responsibilities. Understanding  the  impact  of  corporate  social  responsibility  (CSR)  on  social  inclusivity  is  crucial  in ensuring trade-offs between companies and the citizens residing where development takes place. There is  a  need  for  a  national  consensus on  a  CSR  policy  framework  within  a  social  cohesion  and  nation-building  compact.  The  inclusion  of  the  legislation  for  ensuring  compliance  towards  fulfilling  the purpose of the country’s sustainable development agenda is fully referred to in the discussion. The unparalleled position requires collective energies with the public to actualize strategies. This chapter underpins  the  importance  of  having  CSR  as  a  standalone  legislation  and  seeks  to  contribute  to  the world of science  by leveling  the ground with  the rhetoric  discussion. The document  analysis was  the backbone  for  a  qualitative  research  methodology  where  the  related  intricacies  were  revealed.  The research  will  embark  on  an  empirical  investigation  to  publish  evidence-based  results  based  on  the document analysis and legislative framework. The gap of a lack of legislation in South Africa has been identified  notwithstanding  the  related  legislation,  which  corroborates  the  direction  the  country  is taking  towards  CSR.  The study  contributes  to  the  body  of  knowledge  on  sustainable  development  on the  transformation  agenda.  However,  this  study  is  limited  in  the  sense  that  it  did  not  embark  on  a largescale  data  collection  from  the  implementers  and  the  communities  for  empirical  research  which could  be  measured.  This  shall  be  employed  in  future  research  for  evidence-based  information  and knowledge sharing. | 
en | 
| dc.description.sponsorship | 
University of South Africa | 
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| dc.language.iso | 
en | 
en | 
| dc.publisher | 
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RESEARCH IN BUSINESS AND SOCIAL SCIENCE | 
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| dc.subject | 
Corporate Social Responsibility | 
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| dc.subject | 
Environmental Responsibility, | 
en | 
| dc.subject | 
Economic Sustainability | 
en | 
| dc.subject | 
Social Inclusion | 
en | 
| dc.title | 
Rethinking and reimagining corporate social responsibility as  legislation in South Africa using a qualitative document analytics  approach | 
en | 
| dc.type | 
Article | 
en | 
| dc.description.department | 
Development Studies | 
en |