Full Articles/ Reviews/ Shorts Papers/ Abstracts are welcomed in the following research fields:
These represent the foundational pillars of each distinct discipline before they intersect with the others.
Foundations of Business & Management
Corporate governance structures and shareholder primacy
Strategic management and competitive advantage
Supply chain logistics and operations
Financial reporting, accounting, and capital allocation
Human resource management and organizational behavior
Foundations of Law & Legal Systems
Jurisprudence and the philosophy of law
Constitutional law and statutory interpretation
Contract law and tort liability
Administrative law and regulatory mechanisms
International law and treaty frameworks
Foundations of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
The history and evolution of CSR philosophies
The Triple Bottom Line framework (People, Planet, Profit)
Philanthropy versus systemic corporate citizenship
Stakeholder theory ( Freeman's model) versus Shareholder theory (Friedman's model)
Voluntary industry standards and codes of conduct
These topics emerge where two or all three of these disciplines overlap, driving modern corporate strategy, regulatory compliance, and ethical mandates.
The Legal Framework of CSR (Law + CSR)
Hard Law vs. Soft Law: Transitioning voluntary CSR initiatives into legally binding regulations.
Mandatory Human Rights Due Diligence (MHRDD): Legal frameworks requiring companies to audit their supply chains for human rights abuses.
Environmental Protection Statutes: Statutory compliance regarding carbon emissions, waste management, and biodiversity preservation.
Consumer Protection and Anti-Greenwashing Law: Legal penalties for deceptive marketing regarding a company's environmental or social impact.
Corporate Governance and ESG (Business + Law + CSR)
Fiduciary Duties of Directors: The legal and business debate over whether directors must maximize short-term shareholder profit or consider long-term ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance) risks.
The Rise of Benefit Corporations: Legal business structures (like B-Corps) that legally bind a company to pursue a public benefit alongside profit.
Executive Compensation: Linking executive bonuses and payouts to the achievement of specific CSR and sustainability metrics.
Shareholder Activism: Institutional investors using proxy voting and legal resolutions to force corporate boards to adopt climate and social policies.
Sustainable Finance and Investment Law (Business + Law)
Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulations (SFDR): Legal mandates forcing financial institutions to disclose how they integrate sustainability risks into their investment decisions.
Green Bonds and Climate Finance: The business mechanics and legal covenants governing debt instruments raised specifically for environmental projects.
Impact Investing: Allocating capital to businesses that generate measurable social or environmental solutions alongside a financial return.
Labor, Supply Chains, and Human Rights (Business + Law + CSR)
International Labor Standards: Compliance with International Labour Organization (ILO) core conventions regarding child labor, forced labor, and collective bargaining.
Supply Chain Transparency: Laws requiring companies to track and report on the working conditions of third-party suppliers worldwide.
Modern Slavery Acts: Domestic legislation penalizing companies that fail to address human trafficking and exploitation within their commercial networks.
Business Ethics, Compliance, and Integrity (Business + Law)
Anti-Corruption and Bribery: Legal frameworks like the US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) and the UK Bribery Act that dictate how businesses must operate globally.
Whistleblower Protection: Corporate mechanisms and legal safeguards that protect employees who report internal corporate malpractice or ethical breaches.
Corporate Crime and Accountability: Deciding civil and criminal liability when corporations cause systemic social or environmental harm.
Technology, Data, and AI Ethics (Business + Law + CSR)
Data Privacy Rights: Regulating how businesses monetize consumer data, governed by frameworks like the GDPR and CCPA.
Ethical AI Governance: Corporate policies and emerging legal frameworks aimed at eliminating bias, ensuring transparency, and protecting jobs amid automation.
The Digital Divide: A corporation’s social responsibility to ensure equitable access to technology and digital literacy.