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Título
Are the Sins of the Father the Sins of the Sons, but Not the Daughters? Exploring How Leadership Gender and Generation Impact the Corporate Social Responsibility of Franchise Firms
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Corporate social responsability
Women in leadership
Franchising
Gender differences
Intergenerational succession
Clasificación UNESCO
5308 Economía General
Fecha de publicación
2022-07-13
Editor
MDPI
Citación
Fernández-Muiños, M., Money, K., Saraeva, A., Garnelo-Gomez, I., & Vázquez-Suárez, L. (2022). Are the Sins of the Father the Sins of the Sons, but Not the Daughters? Exploring How Leadership Gender and Generation Impact the Corporate Social Responsibility of Franchise Firms. Sustainability (Switzerland), 14(14). https://doi.org/10.3390/SU14148574
Resumen
[EN] Emerging literature suggests that male leaders guide their companies more towards operations-related (OR) Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) and female leaders lead their companies more towards non-operation-related (Non-OR) CSR activities. Nevertheless, very little research has considered intergenerational issues in CSR practices. This study explores this question in a context unexplored to date, the franchise industry. We apply multivariate analysis to explore differences between franchisor leaders. Our results reveal that successor leaders engage their companies more in normative CSR than founding leaders. Contrary to our expectations, they also encourage more instrumental CSR activities compared to the founders. We found that female leaders promote nor mative CSR practices to a greater extent than their male counterparts. However, gender differences
in instrumental CSR were only present for the group of current leaders, where men outperformed women. Whenwedelvedinto the analyses by looking at the influence of the gender of the previous founder, we found that female heirs engage their companies at the same levels of instrumental CSR as their male heir counterparts. Implications for CSR practices in franchise firms and directions for future research are discussed.
URI
ISSN
2071-1050
DOI
10.3390/su14148574
Versión del editor
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