The Influence of Corporate Social Responsibility Efforts on the Moral Behavior of Consumers

Little is known about how corporate social responsibility (CSR) efforts affect consumer behavior outcomes that are not ultimately tied back to the firm (e.g., corporate financial performance). This dissertation addresses that gap in the literature by examining the influence of CSR behavior on the m...

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Main Author: Newman, Kevin P.
Other Authors: Brucks, Merrie
Language:en_US
Published: The University of Arizona. 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/320000
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-3200002015-10-23T05:34:41Z The Influence of Corporate Social Responsibility Efforts on the Moral Behavior of Consumers Newman, Kevin P. Brucks, Merrie Lusch, Robert Nielsen, Jesper Stone, Jeff Corporate Social Responsibility Moral Behavior Management Brand Relationships Little is known about how corporate social responsibility (CSR) efforts affect consumer behavior outcomes that are not ultimately tied back to the firm (e.g., corporate financial performance). This dissertation addresses that gap in the literature by examining the influence of CSR behavior on the moral behavior of consumers. Findings from this dissertation demonstrate that some consumers vicariously balance their moral behavior against a brand's CSR efforts. For instance, I show that a brand's more socially responsible behavior can negatively influence the moral behavior of consumers (i.e., vicarious moral licensing effect) while a brand's less socially responsible behavior can positively influence the moral behavior of consumers (i.e., vicarious moral cleansing effect). However, these effects are limited to those consumers who have extended their psychological self to a brand conducting the CSR efforts. A series of five studies tests the proposed vicarious moral balancing effect, highlights boundary conditions of this effect, and demonstrates the process by which the vicarious moral licensing effect occurs. Study 1 demonstrates the vicarious moral balancing effect in the generosity behavior of consumers while study 2 extends these effects to the cheating behavior of consumers. Studies 3 and 4 find that making consumers more mindful of their moral decision making and behavior eliminates and even reverses earlier findings showing the negative influence of CSR behavior on the moral behavior of consumers. Study 5 demonstrates a potential process explanation for the vicarious moral licensing effect by showing that CSR behavior framed as goal commitment increases positive moral consumer behavior while CSR behavior framed as goal progress decreases positive moral consumer behavior. Implications, contributions, and limitations of these findings and directions for future areas of research are discussed. 2014 text Electronic Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/320000 en_US Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Corporate Social Responsibility
Moral Behavior
Management
Brand Relationships
spellingShingle Corporate Social Responsibility
Moral Behavior
Management
Brand Relationships
Newman, Kevin P.
The Influence of Corporate Social Responsibility Efforts on the Moral Behavior of Consumers
description Little is known about how corporate social responsibility (CSR) efforts affect consumer behavior outcomes that are not ultimately tied back to the firm (e.g., corporate financial performance). This dissertation addresses that gap in the literature by examining the influence of CSR behavior on the moral behavior of consumers. Findings from this dissertation demonstrate that some consumers vicariously balance their moral behavior against a brand's CSR efforts. For instance, I show that a brand's more socially responsible behavior can negatively influence the moral behavior of consumers (i.e., vicarious moral licensing effect) while a brand's less socially responsible behavior can positively influence the moral behavior of consumers (i.e., vicarious moral cleansing effect). However, these effects are limited to those consumers who have extended their psychological self to a brand conducting the CSR efforts. A series of five studies tests the proposed vicarious moral balancing effect, highlights boundary conditions of this effect, and demonstrates the process by which the vicarious moral licensing effect occurs. Study 1 demonstrates the vicarious moral balancing effect in the generosity behavior of consumers while study 2 extends these effects to the cheating behavior of consumers. Studies 3 and 4 find that making consumers more mindful of their moral decision making and behavior eliminates and even reverses earlier findings showing the negative influence of CSR behavior on the moral behavior of consumers. Study 5 demonstrates a potential process explanation for the vicarious moral licensing effect by showing that CSR behavior framed as goal commitment increases positive moral consumer behavior while CSR behavior framed as goal progress decreases positive moral consumer behavior. Implications, contributions, and limitations of these findings and directions for future areas of research are discussed.
author2 Brucks, Merrie
author_facet Brucks, Merrie
Newman, Kevin P.
author Newman, Kevin P.
author_sort Newman, Kevin P.
title The Influence of Corporate Social Responsibility Efforts on the Moral Behavior of Consumers
title_short The Influence of Corporate Social Responsibility Efforts on the Moral Behavior of Consumers
title_full The Influence of Corporate Social Responsibility Efforts on the Moral Behavior of Consumers
title_fullStr The Influence of Corporate Social Responsibility Efforts on the Moral Behavior of Consumers
title_full_unstemmed The Influence of Corporate Social Responsibility Efforts on the Moral Behavior of Consumers
title_sort influence of corporate social responsibility efforts on the moral behavior of consumers
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/320000
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