Editorial
Abstract
As business evolves from century to century, and from generation to generation, there is a welcome realization that business can not limit its purpose to making money for its owners. While the predominant profit motive in investing cannot be questioned this proposition is no longer considered fully valid. That the revenues earned by a business organization are part of the pie held by the society as a stakeholder in the business has come to gain acceptance. As such, the need for corporates to return to society atleast a part of what it has given them is accepted as a valid claim on the corporate's profits. But is it always the altruistic motive that sees corporate spending on CSR?Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
It is herein agreed that:
1.I/We will not publish above said contribution anywhere else without the prior written permission of the publisher unless it has been changed substantially.
2.I/ We declare and warrant that the shared contribution is original, excerpts for such excerpts from copyrighted works as may be included with the permission of the copyright holder and author thereof, that it contains no libelous statements, and does not infringe on any copyright, trademark, patent, statutory right, proprietary right of others. The author signs for and accepts responsibility for releasing this material on behalf of any and all co-authors.
3.The author also warrants that he/ she has the right to enter into this agreement, the research paper/ book review/ articlecontains no libelous or unlawful statements, contains no instructions that may cause harm or injury and does not violate the copyright or trademark, or infringes on the right or the privacy or others; and that all statements in the article asserted as facts are either true or are based upon reasonable research.
4.I/ We agree to indemnify the Editors of IMR against all claims and expenses arising from any breach of warranty from me/us in this agreement.