Essay Topic Hub

Social Responsibility
Essays

954+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

954 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Social responsibility refers to the obligations that individuals, organizations, and corporations hold toward society and the broader communities they affect. The topic appears across business, ethics, marketing, and social issues courses because it sits at the intersection of profit-driven decision-making and moral accountability. What makes it academically compelling is the genuine tension it surfaces: how should companies balance the interests of stakeholders, employees, and society against competitive pressures? Papers in this area frequently engage with corporate social responsibility frameworks, utilitarian ethics, and social contract theory, and some directly critique influential positions such as Milton Friedman's 1970 argument that a company's only responsibility is to increase profits for shareholders.

The archived papers approach this subject from several angles. Company-focused case studies examine how specific organizations — including Starbucks, Walmart, and Southwest Airlines — translate social responsibility into brand strategy, operational decisions, or responses to ethical failures. Other essays take a policy or evaluative stance, assessing a company's attitude toward its stakeholders or analyzing banking practices through utilitarian frameworks. Some papers concentrate on narrower communities, exploring social responsibility as it applies to college students or as a component of marketing ethics, while others compare ethical theories in business contexts more broadly.

A strong essay on social responsibility needs a focused thesis that moves beyond simply defining the concept and instead argues how or why a particular entity succeeds or fails in meeting its obligations. Evidence drawn from corporate policies, documented business decisions, and established ethical frameworks tends to carry the most weight. The common pitfall to avoid is treating social responsibility as universally positive without engaging the real trade-offs companies face when stakeholder interests conflict with financial performance.

954 papers
Sort by:
Thesis Masters
Perception of intelligence
Learning and intelligence is a part of the process of reasoning, and reasoning is based on what is important to that culture. The traditions of learning in China were holistic and group based (politeness, etc.) and thus never developed so much of the individualist ideas that came out of the Enlightenment in the West. When combined with capitalism and the Protestant Ethic, intelligence became defined in the West as "what you know" and "show me what you know" – all very different than Eastern concepts
Paper Doctorate
Dupont Since Dupont\'s Beginnings in the 19th
Since DuPont's beginnings in the 19th century, the company has been continually at the forefront for: innovation, research and development. This is because they were focused on addressing host of different needs in…
Thesis Undergraduate
Sustainable Market Orientation a New Approach
Creating Opportunities for Sustainable Marketing
Research Paper Undergraduate
Environmental factors and their impacts
Wal-Mart, the public corporation founded by Sam Walton in 1962 in the United States, represents the world's largest retailer and seventh-largest corporation in terms of gross weight.
Paper Undergraduate
Systems Theory Over the Last
Over the last decade the role of business and society, have become more connected than at any other time in recorded history. This is significant, because it highlights a shift that is occurring in the world of…
Essay Doctorate
Deontological ethics as a theoretical lens for business ethics in organizations
This paper is about the Adelphia accounting fraud case. The case examines the issues from the deontological perspective, where the imperative is defined in terms of maximizing shareholder value and upholding the integrity of the financial system. The actions of the executives, board members and the auditors are all given consideration.
Essay Doctorate
Ethical implementation in values-driven management practices
Creating an ethical foundation is crucial for success within a changing consumer environment (Driscoll & Hoffman 2000). As more and more consumers become concerned with organization's social and environmental…
Research Paper Doctorate
Ethics and social responsibility in management
¶ … repositories of ethical values, religion, philosophy, cultural experience, and law influence managers. Although different doctrine controls different religions, all of the major religions preach some form of…
Thesis Doctorate
Accomplishments of Fred Olsen
The current Fred Olsen was born in the year 1929. He took over the family business at a tender age of 26 in the year 1955. The family business of the Olsen's can be dated back to 1848. This is when the Olsen family first showed interest in the cruise ship venture. Now they not only have investments in the cruise ship business, but they have diversified into other business ventures like ceramics, building of ships, exploration of gas and oil and development services. It was the second Olsen who established the Olsen name as one of the best Norwegian shipping company. He was a seaman who was given command of his father's ship, later two ships and as time went by, he added more ships to the fleet.
Paper Undergraduate
Staffing a New Crime Laboratory
The forensic science has grown with the growth in technology. From the fictitious Sherlock Holmes who could identify the part of London from where the visitor came, to modern investigation of genetic components, science has traveled far. There are still lots of loose ends and the profession has to be always open for improvement. Scientist certification and laboratory accreditation is one of the methods that are used to assure quality. "Certification is the process by which individual practitioners of a profession are deemed competent by a peer review process to practice that profession.' Thus the professions that may harm the public and change the course of society require proper certification. These include lawyers, teachers, architects, accountants, and so on. Of paramount importance is the certification of medical specialists. Medicine was and is closely associated with criminal investigation. For criminalistics a ‘Certification Study Committee' called the ‘Criminalistics Certification Study Committee'--CCSC in 1976 prescribed the standards and qualifications for the operations in forensic chemistry; "Firearms and/or tool mark identification; Forensic Serology; Particulate Evidence; Imprint Evidence; Generalists, and any other specific study".