The stakeholder theory is a theory of organizational management and business ethics that accounts for multiple constituencies impacted by business entities like employees, suppliers, local communities, creditors, and others. It addresses morals and values in managing an organization, such as those related to corporate social responsibility, market economy, and social contract theory.
The stakeholder view of strategy
integrates a resource-based view and a market-based view, and adds a socio-political
level. One common version of stakeholder theory seeks to define the specific stakeholders
of a company (the normative theory of stakeholder identification) and
then examine the conditions under which managers treat these parties as
stakeholders (the descriptive theory of stakeholder salience).
In fields such as law, management, and
human resources, stakeholder theory succeeded in challenging the usual analysis
frameworks, by suggesting that stakeholders' needs should be put at the
beginning of any action. Some authors
such as Geoffroy Murat tried to apply stakeholder's theory to irregular warfare.
History of Stakeholder Theory
Concepts similar to modern stakeholder
theory can be traced back to longstanding philosophical views about the nature
of civil society itself and the relations between individuals. The word "stakeholder" in its
current use first appeared in an internal memorandum at the Stanford Research
Institute in 1963. Subsequently, a
"plethora" of stakeholder definitions and theories were developed. In 1971, Hein Kroos and Klaus Schwab published
a German booklet Moderne Unternehmensführung im Maschinenbau (Modern
Enterprise Management in Mechanical Engineering) arguing that the
management of a modern enterprise must serve not only shareholders but all
stakeholders (die Interessenten) to achieve long-term growth and prosperity.
This claim is disputed. US authors
followed; for example, in 1983, Ian Mitroff published "Stakeholders of the
Organizational Mind" in San Francisco.
R. Edward Freeman had an article on Stakeholder theory in the California
Management Review in early 1983, but makes no reference to Mitroff's work,
attributing the development of the concept to internal discussion in the
Stanford Research Institute. He followed this article with a book Strategic
Management: A Stakeholder Approach. This book identifies and models the
groups which are stakeholders of a corporation, and both describes and
recommends methods by which management can give due regard to the interests of
those groups. In short, it attempts to address the "principle of who or
what really counts. In the traditional view of a company, the shareholder view,
only the owners or shareholders of the company are important, and the company
has a binding fiduciary duty to put their needs first, to increase value for
them. Stakeholder theory instead argues that there are other parties involved,
including employees, customers, suppliers, financiers, communities, governmental
bodies, political groups, trade associations, and trade unions. Even competitors are sometimes counted as
stakeholders – their status being derived from their capacity to affect the
firm and its stakeholders. The nature of what constitutes a stakeholder is
highly contested (Miles, 2012), with hundreds of definitions existing in the
academic literature (Miles, 2011).
Development
Numerous articles and books written on
stakeholder theory generally credit Freeman as the "father of stakeholder
theory." Freeman's Strategic
Management: A Stakeholder Approach is widely cited in the field as
being the foundation of stakeholder theory, although Freeman himself credits
several bodies of literature in the development of his approach, including strategic
management, corporate planning, systems theory, organization theory, and corporate
social responsibility. A related field of research examines the concept of
stakeholders and stakeholder salience, or the importance of various stakeholder
groups to a specific firm.
An anticipation of such concepts, as
part of Corporate Social Responsibility, appear in a publication that appeared
in 1968 by the Italian economist Giancarlo Pallavicini, creator of "the
decomposition method of the parameters" to calculate the results are not
directly economic activity of enterprise, regarding ethical issues , moral,
social, cultural and environmental.
More recent scholarly works on the topic
of stakeholder theory that exemplify research and theorizing in this area
include Donaldson and Preston (1995), Mitchell, Agle, and Wood (1997), Friedman
and Miles (2002), and Phillips (2003).
Donaldson and Preston argue that the
theory has multiple distinct aspects that are mutually supportive: descriptive,
instrumental, and normative. The
descriptive approach is used in research to describe and explain the
characteristics and behaviors of firms, including how companies are managed,
how the board of directors considers corporate constituencies, the way that
managers think about managing, and the nature of the firm itself. The instrumental approach uses empirical data
to identify the connections that exist between the management of stakeholder
groups and the achievement of corporate goals (most commonly profitability and
efficiency goals). The normative
approach, identified as the core of the theory by Donaldson and Preston,
examines the function of the corporation and identifies the "moral or
philosophical guidelines for the operation and management of the
corporation." Since the publication
of this article in 1995, it has served as a foundational reference for
researchers in the field, having been cited over 1,100 times.
Mitchell, et al. derive a typology of
stakeholders based on the attributes of power (the extent a party has means to impose its will in a
relationship), legitimacy (socially accepted and expected structures or
behaviors), and urgency (time sensitivity or criticality of the stakeholder's
claims). By examining the combination of
these attributes in a binary manner, 8 types of stakeholders are derived along
with their implications for the organization. Friedman and Miles explore the
implications of contentious relationships between stakeholders and
organizations by introducing compatible/incompatible interests and
necessary/contingent connections as additional attributes with which to examine
the configuration of these relationships.
Robert Allen Phillips distinguishes between normatively legitimate
stakeholders (those to whom an organization holds a moral obligation) and
derivatively legitimate stakeholders (those whose stakeholder status is derived
from their ability to affect the organization or its normatively legitimate
stakeholders).
Implementation in Other Fields
Stakeholder theory succeeds in becoming
famous not only in the business ethics fields; it is used as one of the
frameworks in corporate social responsibility methods. For example, ISO 26000 and
GRI (Global Reporting Initiative) involve stakeholder analysis.
In the field of business ethics, Weiss,
J.W. (2014) illustrates how stakeholder analysis can be complemented with
issues management approaches to examine societal, organizational, and
individual dilemmas. Several case studies are offered to illustrated uses of
these methods.
Stakeholder theory has seen growing
uptake in higher education in the late 20th and early 21st centuries. One influential definition defines a
stakeholder in the context of higher education as anyone with a legitimate
interest in education who thereby acquires a right to intervene. Studies of higher education first began to
recognize students as stakeholders in 1975.
External stakeholders may include employers. In Europe, the rise of stakeholder regimes
has arisen from the shift of higher education from a government-run bureaucracy
to modern systems in which the government's role involves more monitoring than
direct control.
Criticism of Stakeholder Theory
The political philosopher Charles
Blattberg has criticized stakeholder theory for assuming that the interests of
the various stakeholders can be, at best, compromised or balanced against each
other. Blattberg argues that this is a product of its emphasis on negotiation
as the chief mode of dialogue for dealing with conflicts between stakeholder
interests. He recommends conversation instead and this leads him to defend what
he calls a 'patriotic' conception of the corporation as an alternative to that
associated with stakeholder theory.
According to Mansell (2013), by applying
the political concept of a 'social contract' to the corporation, stakeholder theory
undermines the principles on which a market economy is based.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stakeholder_theory
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Afterword by the Blog Writer
The stakeholder religion is a direct
attack on property rights through a fatuous and pridefully mobocratic
philosophy typically based on the thrill of feeling angry resentment. The religion itself worships chaos. It considers the threat of destruction by the
unruly to be virtuous conduct.
Stakeholders want to control what they
do not own and haven’t the professionalism to manage. Their conceit is energized by a mirage of
superior morality, which is regarded as inarguable and above that of any
property owners. The goal is to
intimidate the propertied into accepting the ersatz superiority of stagnation
when demanded by a mob of outsiders.
Stakeholders have done massive damage in
dumbing down higher education in America.
In a separate war, bankers have pretended to be subject matter experts
and have corrupted American accounting standards since the inception of the
Financial Accounting Standards Board of 1973.
The kind of power exercised by a stakeholding parasite corrupts
dangerously and thoroughly.
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