Crane, Andrew, George R. Gardiner Professor of Business Ethics, Schulich School of Business at York Unviersity, Toronto
McWilliams, Abagail, Professor in the College of Business, University of Illinois, Chicago
Matten, Dirk, Hewlett-Packard Chair in Corporate Social Responsibility, Schulich School of Business, York University, Toronto
Moon, Jeremy, Professor and Director of the International Centre for Corporate Social Responsibility, Nottingham University Business School
Siegel, Donald S., Professor of Entrepreneurship, University of California, Riverside
Print publication date: 2008 (this edition) Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-921159-3
Published to Oxford Handbooks Online: September 2009







doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199211593.003.0007

Gerard Hanlon


Gerard Hanlon is a Professor of Organizational Sociology, at the School of Business and Management, Queen Mary College, University of London. He holds a Ph.D. in Sociology from Trinity College, University of Dublin. His research interests include social theory, the nature of capitalist societies, the relationship between the state and the market, critique of political economy, the work of the middle class, professional organizations, and industrial sociology. Professor Hanlon is the author of Commercialization of Accountancy: Flexible Accumulation and the Transformation of the Service Class (Macmillan, 1994) and Lawyers, the State and the Market: Professionalism Revisited (Macmillan, 1998). He has published numerous papers, and has recently completed two Economic and Social Research Council projects: one on corporate social responsibility and a second on innovative health technologies with particular reference to telemedicine—see .

 
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I Introduction
II Perspectives on Corporate Social Responsibility
III Critiques of Corporate Social Responsibility
IV Actors and Drivers
V Managing Corporate Social Responsibility
VI Corporate Social Responsibility in Global Context
VII Future Perspectives and Conclusions