Do corporate social responsibility practices of firms attract prospective employees? Perception of university students from a developing country
Abstract This paper primarily explores the relevance of Corporate Social Responsibility Practices (CSRP) of organizations in attracting university students (prospective employees) in developing countries. The study employed a survey strategy, where questionnaires were administered to 600 final-year...
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Online Access: | http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40991-018-0031-6 |
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doaj-9a81a20dcf724a3cbc6a21305048c1de2020-11-25T02:46:51ZengSpringerOpenInternational Journal of Corporate Social Responsibility2366-00662366-00742018-04-013111110.1186/s40991-018-0031-6Do corporate social responsibility practices of firms attract prospective employees? Perception of university students from a developing countrySamuel Nana Yaw Simpson0Eunice Kafui Aprim1Department of Accounting, University of Ghana Business School, LegonDepartment of Accounting, University of Ghana Business School, LegonAbstract This paper primarily explores the relevance of Corporate Social Responsibility Practices (CSRP) of organizations in attracting university students (prospective employees) in developing countries. The study employed a survey strategy, where questionnaires were administered to 600 final-year undergraduate students at the premier Business School in Ghana out of which 500 were returned. Though results show relatively low level of CSR awareness, the respondents agreed that the elements of an organisation’s CSRP, whether economic, social or environmental, played a determining role in their preference for a particular organisation (employer). Also, the disclosure of CSRP by an organisation is relevant in their choice of an employer. The findings suggest the need for organisations to take cognizance of the growing interest of prospective employees in working for organisations that engage in CSR activities and disclosures. Furthermore, educational institutions must be deliberate in developing CSR orientation of students to engage in the systematic processing of CSR related information through Education for Sustainable Development (ESD).http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40991-018-0031-6Corporate social responsibilityProspective employeesAttraction to an organisationGhana |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Samuel Nana Yaw Simpson Eunice Kafui Aprim |
spellingShingle |
Samuel Nana Yaw Simpson Eunice Kafui Aprim Do corporate social responsibility practices of firms attract prospective employees? Perception of university students from a developing country International Journal of Corporate Social Responsibility Corporate social responsibility Prospective employees Attraction to an organisation Ghana |
author_facet |
Samuel Nana Yaw Simpson Eunice Kafui Aprim |
author_sort |
Samuel Nana Yaw Simpson |
title |
Do corporate social responsibility practices of firms attract prospective employees? Perception of university students from a developing country |
title_short |
Do corporate social responsibility practices of firms attract prospective employees? Perception of university students from a developing country |
title_full |
Do corporate social responsibility practices of firms attract prospective employees? Perception of university students from a developing country |
title_fullStr |
Do corporate social responsibility practices of firms attract prospective employees? Perception of university students from a developing country |
title_full_unstemmed |
Do corporate social responsibility practices of firms attract prospective employees? Perception of university students from a developing country |
title_sort |
do corporate social responsibility practices of firms attract prospective employees? perception of university students from a developing country |
publisher |
SpringerOpen |
series |
International Journal of Corporate Social Responsibility |
issn |
2366-0066 2366-0074 |
publishDate |
2018-04-01 |
description |
Abstract This paper primarily explores the relevance of Corporate Social Responsibility Practices (CSRP) of organizations in attracting university students (prospective employees) in developing countries. The study employed a survey strategy, where questionnaires were administered to 600 final-year undergraduate students at the premier Business School in Ghana out of which 500 were returned. Though results show relatively low level of CSR awareness, the respondents agreed that the elements of an organisation’s CSRP, whether economic, social or environmental, played a determining role in their preference for a particular organisation (employer). Also, the disclosure of CSRP by an organisation is relevant in their choice of an employer. The findings suggest the need for organisations to take cognizance of the growing interest of prospective employees in working for organisations that engage in CSR activities and disclosures. Furthermore, educational institutions must be deliberate in developing CSR orientation of students to engage in the systematic processing of CSR related information through Education for Sustainable Development (ESD). |
topic |
Corporate social responsibility Prospective employees Attraction to an organisation Ghana |
url |
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40991-018-0031-6 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT samuelnanayawsimpson docorporatesocialresponsibilitypracticesoffirmsattractprospectiveemployeesperceptionofuniversitystudentsfromadevelopingcountry AT eunicekafuiaprim docorporatesocialresponsibilitypracticesoffirmsattractprospectiveemployeesperceptionofuniversitystudentsfromadevelopingcountry |
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