VideoCorporate Political Responsibility Taskforce

Emerging Influence Practices & Leveraging Points

Video 3 of 3

 

On February 10, 2022, we spoke with Adam Winkler, UCLA law and Vikramaditya Khanna, Michigan Law to explore “CPR & The History of Corporate Political rights.”

In this discussion, we talked about some of the crucial leverage points corporations and other organizations could take to mitigate their misalignment. For example, consumers, shareholder’s activism, and employees can push corporations to make a change and get involved in certain activities in terms of reputation and long-term profits. As corporations are profit-seeking, finding the proper incentives to encourage corporations to support a healthy democracy could be hard and requires much effort.

In this module, we explore:

  • What emerging trends are you seeing around corporate influence?
  • Where do you see leverage points for improvement?

The Corporate Political Responsibility Taskforce (CPRT)’s Expert Dialogues are in-depth, recorded conversations with academic experts, stakeholder advocates and business practitioners to provide our members and other CPR champions with the expertise and context they need to develop principled, proactive CPR strategies. We invite those interested in a constructive, non-partisan, principles-based discussion.

KEYWORDS: #CorporatePoliticalResponsibility #ESG #CivicEngagement #Democracy

More Resources

Sort by type
361 – 364 of 364 results showing
BookHarvard University Press

Mancur Olson’s classic work explains why individuals often fail to organize effectively around shared interests, even when collective action would benefit all. His “free rider” problem and distinction between small and large groups reshape understanding of labor unions, corporations, and political coalitions. Olson’s framework underlies modern theories of governance, lobbying, and institutional design—key foundations for Corporate Political Responsibility. 

View Details
ArticleMIT Sloan

Presents a framework for when companies should present forceful or tempered political positions based on their publicly stated values and materiality.

View Details
Website

The Long-Term Stock Exchange (LTSE) listing standards include expectations that companies will take responsibility for long-term decision-making across strategy, governance, executive compensation, stakeholder engagement, and investor relations. These standards are designed to help businesses build sustainable value over time for all stakeholders, rather than focusing on short-term gains, allowing investors to better assess long-term capital investments.

 

View Details
ReportSaylor Academy

This textbook section introduces major corporate and agency public-relations subfunctions: issues management, media and community relations, CSR and philanthropy, investor relations, marketing communications, government relations, lobbying, internal communication, crisis management, and more. It shows how communication, advocacy, and stakeholder engagement are structured inside organizations, shaping how they respond to risks, opportunities, and public scrutiny.

View Details
Share.

Do you have a resource to recommend for The CPR Hub? Please reach out and we will review it for future updates!

Receive Updates from The CPR Hub

Learn about new tools, insights and events to help you consider how CPR can help your company, clients or members.

Stay in the loop.