Buen Vivir: A Path to Reimagining Corporate Social Responsibility in Mexico after COVID-19

The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed the unsustainable relations between business, society, and the natural environment in Mexico and around the world. Given these unsustainable relations, this essay asks the question: How can Mexican and multinational corporations enable human flourishing both at work...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bryan W. Husted
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-06-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/11/6451
id doaj-d289bcb10be54a4998d9a842f7cbaeb8
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d289bcb10be54a4998d9a842f7cbaeb82021-06-30T23:26:19ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502021-06-01136451645110.3390/su13116451Buen Vivir: A Path to Reimagining Corporate Social Responsibility in Mexico after COVID-19Bryan W. Husted0EGADE Business School, Tecnologico de Monterrey, Monterrey 64849, MexicoThe COVID-19 pandemic has exposed the unsustainable relations between business, society, and the natural environment in Mexico and around the world. Given these unsustainable relations, this essay asks the question: How can Mexican and multinational corporations enable human flourishing both at work and in the communities where they operate? It answers the question by examining how the Indigenous concept of <i>Buen Vivir</i> (living well) can serve as a basis for reimagining corporate social responsibility (CSR). Methodologically, it draws on ancient and contemporary Nahua poets as sources of ancestral Indigenous knowledge. Using these poets, the paper first establishes the applicability of <i>Buen Vivir</i> for Mexico. Relevant concepts include the quality of life, the relationship of humans to nature, the goal of economic growth, and the value of Indigenous knowledge. Using <i>Buen Vivir</i> as a framework for rethinking CSR, the paper integrates business within nature and dialogues with ancestral knowledge. It also focuses on localism and particularism, on quality in addition to quantity, on alternatives to economic growth, and on community. It ends by examining the implications of <i>Buen Vivir</i> for CSR theory and practice by incorporating Indigenous practices of communal work and conceptualizing the firm as a member of the community.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/11/6451corporate social responsibilitysustainability<i>Buen Vivir</i>Mexicoindigenous knowl-edge
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bryan W. Husted
spellingShingle Bryan W. Husted
Buen Vivir: A Path to Reimagining Corporate Social Responsibility in Mexico after COVID-19
Sustainability
corporate social responsibility
sustainability
<i>Buen Vivir</i>
Mexico
indigenous knowl-edge
author_facet Bryan W. Husted
author_sort Bryan W. Husted
title Buen Vivir: A Path to Reimagining Corporate Social Responsibility in Mexico after COVID-19
title_short Buen Vivir: A Path to Reimagining Corporate Social Responsibility in Mexico after COVID-19
title_full Buen Vivir: A Path to Reimagining Corporate Social Responsibility in Mexico after COVID-19
title_fullStr Buen Vivir: A Path to Reimagining Corporate Social Responsibility in Mexico after COVID-19
title_full_unstemmed Buen Vivir: A Path to Reimagining Corporate Social Responsibility in Mexico after COVID-19
title_sort buen vivir: a path to reimagining corporate social responsibility in mexico after covid-19
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2021-06-01
description The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed the unsustainable relations between business, society, and the natural environment in Mexico and around the world. Given these unsustainable relations, this essay asks the question: How can Mexican and multinational corporations enable human flourishing both at work and in the communities where they operate? It answers the question by examining how the Indigenous concept of <i>Buen Vivir</i> (living well) can serve as a basis for reimagining corporate social responsibility (CSR). Methodologically, it draws on ancient and contemporary Nahua poets as sources of ancestral Indigenous knowledge. Using these poets, the paper first establishes the applicability of <i>Buen Vivir</i> for Mexico. Relevant concepts include the quality of life, the relationship of humans to nature, the goal of economic growth, and the value of Indigenous knowledge. Using <i>Buen Vivir</i> as a framework for rethinking CSR, the paper integrates business within nature and dialogues with ancestral knowledge. It also focuses on localism and particularism, on quality in addition to quantity, on alternatives to economic growth, and on community. It ends by examining the implications of <i>Buen Vivir</i> for CSR theory and practice by incorporating Indigenous practices of communal work and conceptualizing the firm as a member of the community.
topic corporate social responsibility
sustainability
<i>Buen Vivir</i>
Mexico
indigenous knowl-edge
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/11/6451
work_keys_str_mv AT bryanwhusted buenvivirapathtoreimaginingcorporatesocialresponsibilityinmexicoaftercovid19
_version_ 1721351382119743488